Aquatic Coleoptera Of Singapore: Species Richness, Ecology And Conservation #
Author
Hendrich, Lars
Author
Balke, Michael
text
Raffles Bulletin of Zoology
2004
52
1
97
145
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.13244881
2345-7600
13244881
Neochetina eichhorniae
Warner, 1970
Neochetina eichhorniae
Warner, 1970: 487
;
O’Brien, 1976: 169- 170
; DeLoach & Cordo, 1976: 643-652;
Wright, 1980: 529- 535
.
Material examined. –
2 specimens
–
Other areas -
2 ex.
,
Lorong Banir
, pond 1,
14 Jul.1995
, NS 200, coll.
H. K. Lua
et al. (
ZRC
)
.
Distribution. –
Argentina, west to the Andes, north to Panama and Trinidad and in southeastern Mexico. Introduced into the United States, Australia (Northern Territories and Queensland) and Southeast Asia as a biological control agent for the control of water hyacinth,
Eichhornia crassipes
(
O’Brien, 1976
;
Wright, 1980
).
Singapore
!
Ecology. –
All of the six species of the New World genus
Neochetina
are believed to be semi-aquatic and possess specialized aquatic adaptations including hydrofuge hairs and scales.
Neochetina eichhorniae
is known to breed in waterhyacinth,
Eichhornia crassipes
and
E. azurea
(Sw.) Kunth (
Warner, 1970
)
. The life cycle and biology of
N. eichhorniae
have been described in detail by DeLoach & Cordo (1976). Adult weevils feed on the leaves and the larvae tunnel into petioles and crowns. Larval tunnelling is usually followed by rotting of the plant tissues and can result in death of the plant. The species is known to be primarily nocturnal in habit and is also attracted by light (
O’Brien, 1976
).
Remarks
. –
Water hyacinth
Eichhornia crassipes
Solms
is a free-floating aquatic plant that was introduced into the
United States
, Africa, New
Guinea
,
Australia
and many parts of Southeast Asia from its native home in South America (
Brazil
) as an ornamental plant in garden ponds. In
Singapore
it was introduced in 1893 from
Hong Kong
. It has since reproduced beyond control to become a serious aquatic weed in many countries where it completely covers slow-flowing streams, canals, and small lakes, and blocks the passage of boats. Since mechanical and chemical controls are expensive, pollute the water and require repeated applications, several Neotropical insects, feeding on
Eichhornia
, have been used as biological control agents (DeLoach & Cordo, 1976;
Wright, 1980
).
Neochetina eichhorniae
was first introduced to
Thailand
in the 1970’s and later spread to Peninsular
Malaysia
(Wright pers. comm.).