The Diversity of Parasitoids and Their Role in the Control of the Siberian Moth, Dendrolimus sibiricus (Lepidoptera: Lasiocampidae), a Major Coniferous Pest in Northern Asia

Author:

Kirichenko Natalia I.123ORCID,Ageev Alexander A.4ORCID,Astapenko Sergey A.45,Golovina Anna N.4ORCID,Kasparyan Dmitry R.6,Kosheleva Oksana V.7,Timokhov Alexander V.8,Tselikh Ekaterina V.6,Zakharov Evgeny V.9ORCID,Musolin Dmitrii L.10ORCID,Belokobylskij Sergey A.6

Affiliation:

1. Federal Research Center, Sukachev Institute of Forest, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Akademgorodok 50/28, 660036 Krasnoyarsk, Russia

2. Institute of Ecology and Geography, Siberian Federal University, Svobodny pr. 79, 660041 Krasnoyarsk, Russia

3. All-Russian Plant Quarantine Center (FGBU VNIIKR), Krasnoyarsk Branch, Zhelyabova Str., 6/6, 660020 Krasnoyarsk, Russia

4. All-Russian Research Institute of Forestry and Forestry Mechanization (VNIILM), “Forest Pyrology Center”, Krasnoyarsk Branch, Krupskoy St., 42, 660062 Krasnoyarsk, Russia

5. Federal Budgetary Institution “Russian Forest Protection Center”, Akademgorodok 50/2, 660036 Krasnoyarsk, Russia

6. Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya nab. 1, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia

7. All-Russian Institute of Plant Protection (FSBSI VIZR), Podbelskogo 3, 196608 Saint Petersburg, Russia

8. Department of Entomology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie Gory, 119234 Moscow, Russia

9. Canadian Center for DNA Barcoding, Centre for Biodiversity Genomics, College of Biological Sciences, University of Guelph, 50 Stone Road, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada

10. European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization, 21 Boulevard Richard Lenoir, 75011 Paris, France

Abstract

The Siberian moth, Dendrolimus sibiricus Tschetv., 1908 (Lepidoptera: Lasiocampidae) is a conifer pest that causes unprecedented forest mortality in Northern Asia, leading to enormous ecological and economic losses. This is the first study summarizing data on the parasitoid diversity and parasitism of this pest over the last 118 years (1905–2022). Based on 860 specimens of freshly reared and archival parasitoids, 16 species from two orders (Hymenoptera and Diptera) were identified morphologically and/or with the use of DNA barcoding. For all of them, data on distribution and hosts and images of parasitoid adults are provided. Among them, the braconid species, Meteorus versicolor (Wesmael, 1835), was documented as a parasitoid of D. sibiricus for the first time. The eastern Palaearctic form, Aleiodes esenbeckii (Hartig, 1838) dendrolimi (Matsumura, 1926), status nov., was resurrected from synonymy as a valid subspecies, and a key for its differentiation from the western Palaearctic subspecies Aleiodes esenbeckii ssp. esenbecki is provided. DNA barcodes of 11 parasitoid species from Siberia, i.e., nine hymenopterans and two dipterans, represented novel records and can be used for accurate molecular genetic identification of species. An exhaustive checklist of parasitoids accounting for 93 species associated with D. sibirisus in northern Asia was compiled. Finally, the literature and original data on parasitism in D. sibiricus populations for the last 83 years (1940–2022) were analysed taking into account the pest population dynamics (i.e., growth, outbreak, decline, and depression phases). A gradual time-lagged increase in egg and pupal parasitism in D. sibiricus populations was detected, with a peak in the pest decline phase. According to long-term observations, the following species are able to cause significant mortality of D. sibiricus in Northern Asia: the hymenopteran egg parasitoids Telenomus tetratomus and Ooencyrtus pinicolus; the larval parasitoids Aleiodes esenbeckii sp. dendrolimi, Cotesia spp., and Glyptapanteles liparidis; and the dipteran pupal parasitoids Masicera sphingivora, Tachina sp., and Blepharipa sp. Their potential should be further explored in order to develop biocontrol programs for this important forest pest.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

basic project of the Sukachev Institute of Forest SB RAS

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference111 articles.

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4. Vaganov, E.A. (2004). Strukturno-funkcional’naya organizaciya i dinamika lesov: Materialy Vserossijskoj konferencii, posvyashchennoj 60-letiyu Instituta lesa im. V.N. Sukacheva SO RAN i 70-letiyu obrazovaniya Krasnoyarskogo kraya, 1–3 sentyabrya 2004 [Structural-Functional Organisation and Dynamics of Forests: Proceedings of the All-Russian Conference Dedicated to the 60th Anniversary of the Forest Institute. V.N. Sukachev SB RAS and the 70th Anniversary of the Foundation of the Krasnoyarsk Territory, 1–3 September 2004], Institut lesa SO RAN. (In Russian).

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