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Characterization, distribution, biology and impact on Italian walnut orchards of the invasive North-American leafminer Coptodisca lucifluella (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae)

TitleCharacterization, distribution, biology and impact on Italian walnut orchards of the invasive North-American leafminer Coptodisca lucifluella (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae)
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsBernardo, U., van Nieukerken E.J., Sasso R, Gebiola M., Gualtieri L., and Viggiani G.
JournalBulletin of Entomological Research
Volume105
Pagination210-224
ISSN00074853
KeywordsAgromyzidae, anatomy and histology, animal, Animals, Carya, classification, Coptodisca, cytochrome, DNA barcoding, Europe, Female, genetics, Heliozelidae, herbivory, hibernation, host plant, introduced species, Invasive species, Italy, Juglandaceae, Juglans, Juglans nigra, Juglans regia, larva, Lepidoptera, male, Morphology, Mortality, Moth, Moths, North America, nut, orchard, phylogenetics, population distribution, relatedness, Taxonomic, walnut
Abstract

The leafminer Coptodisca sp. (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae), recently recorded for the first time in Europe on Italian black and common walnut trees, is shown to be the North-American Coptodisca lucifluella (Clemens) based on morphological (forewing pattern) and molecular (cytochrome oxidase c subunit I sequence) evidence. The phylogenetic relatedness of three species feeding on Juglandaceae suggests that C. lucifluella has likely shifted, within the same host plant family, from its original North-American hosts Carya spp. to Juglans spp. Over the few years since its detection, it has established in many regions in Italy and has become a widespread and dominant invasive species. The leafminer completes three to four generations per year, with the first adults emerging in April-May and mature larvae of the last generation starting hibernation in September-October. Although a high larval mortality was recorded in field observations (up to 74%), the impact of the pest was substantial with all leaves infested at the end of the last generation in all 3 years tested. The distribution of the leafminer in the canopy was homogeneous. The species is redescribed and illustrated, a lectotype is designated and a new synonymy is established. Copyright © 2015 Cambridge University Press.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84927176412&doi=10.1017%2fS0007485314000947&partnerID=40&md5=ca49667a2750d5729d43d457eae44987
DOI10.1017/S0007485314000947
Citation KeyBernardo2015210