Abstract
The larval stage of Aphodius howitti Hope is a pest of improved and
sown pastures in south-eastern Australia. The great increase in pasture
improvement and of stocking rates over the past 25-30 years have favoured
the development of high numbers of this insect, largely because of its
preference for leguminous pasture species, especially subterranean clover
(Trifolium subterraneum L.).
This paper describes a general study of the life-cycle, behaviour, food,
and oviposition site preferences of the species and includes a discussion of
the mortality factors likely to be of significance in regulating its numbers.
The species has an annual life-cycle. Studies on its biology revealed that
adult females lay two distinct batches of eggs. The larger batch (c. 35
eggs) is laid before the female feeds in dung, sometimes even before flight;
the smaller (c . 15 eggs), after feeding. The presence of dung is therefore
not necessary for the survival of the species which is often found at high
densities in ungrazed turf.
The factors initiating and influencing flight activity were studied in
detail. Initiation is triggered by light of a particular intensity; the time
of appearance of beetles in flight can be forecast accurately in relation to
the time of sunset. Flights are favoured by high temperature, high soil
moisture, and by low wind velocity. Unfed beetles fly upwind towards dung
pads. Gravid females execute a circling, exploratory flight; they appear
to seek out comparatively bare situations for oviposition and usually enter
the soil through small cracks such as are made by germinating clover
plants.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
31 articles.
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