Ongoing invasions of old-growth tropical forests: establishment of three incestuous beetle species in southern Central America (Curculionidae: Scolytinae)
Author
Kirkendall, Lawrence R.
Author
Ødegaard, Frode
text
Zootaxa
2007
1588
53
62
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.273913
f6b846c4-a8ce-4b1e-b682-b56007097672
1175-5326
273913
Euwallacea fornicatus
(Eichhoff)
(
Fig. 1
e–h)
Records.
Recently discovered in North
America
(
Rabaglia
et al.
, 2006
;
Thomas, 2005
); one previous record for Neotropics, a single specimen from an unidentified branch in the
Panama
Canal Zone in
July 1979
(Wood 1980).
COSTA RICA
, Heredia, La Selva Biological Station
10o 26’ N
,
84o 01’ W
,
50–150 m
elevation,
8 April 1982
(1) &
7 April 1983
(1), H. A. Hespenheide; La Selva,
12 July 1996
(1),
2 cm
branch of
Protium panamense
, and
31 July
1997
, 3 cm branch of
Cedrela odorata
(1), L. Kirkendall; La Selva, Project
ALAS
Malaise traps in old-growth forest emptied on
15 Feb. 1993
(1),
1 May 1993
(1),
2 May 1993
(1),
1 July 1993
(1),
15 Feb. 1994
(1), one in secondary growth forest,
2 April 1993
(2). The Malaise traps in old-growth forest are within
500 m
of more disturbed habitats with the exception of a trap (M/08) which is ca
1100 m
inside oldgrowth forest.
PANAMA
, multiple collections from old-growth forest in Prov. Col\n, San Lorenzo Protected Area:
1. Feb. 2002
, beating dead branches of
Brosimum utile
in the understory, F. Ødegaard (1);
1–13 Oct. 2003
, flight intercept trap at
14 m
height, R. Didham & L Fagan (1);
11–15 Oct. 2003
, sticky trap,
Y
. Basset (1);
31 May 2004
, beating dead branches of
Tocoyena pittieri
(Rubiaceae)
, F. Ødegaard (1).
Diagnosis.
This species was identified by direct comparison with authenticated specimens in The Natural History Museum (London). This species was sorted for several years as an unidentified species in the endemic genus
Theoborus
, in the
ALAS
collections. Though
Euwallacea
and
Theoborus
are not closely related (
Jordal, 2002
), these taxa are quite similar;
E. fornicatus
and most described and undescribed
Theoborus
from Central
America
have a carinate posterolateral declivital margin which extends from interstriae 7 or striae 7 on the disc (
Fig. 1
e, h), and
E. fornicatus
and
Theoborus
have similar body proportions, a suture on the antennal club continued on the posterior face (
Fig.
1
g, arrow), and a crenulate margin of the pronotum. This species can be identified using the key to
Xyleborus
in
Wood (1982)
. However, it could easily key to
Theoborus
in that work (
op. cit.,
p. 69), if one does not have great familiarity with antennal club structure in this group, though it does not to key any species in that genus.
Euwallacea fornicatus
can be distinguished from native
Theoborus
species of Central
America
by a combination of size, shape, and details of the elytra (
Wood, 1982
).
Comments.
The single
Panama
collection (Wood 1980) remained the only New World record until North American specimens were collected from the ornamental tree
Delonix regia
(Fabaceae)
in Dade County, Florida in 2002, and in
2003 in
Los Angeles County, California, from four different hosts (
Acer negundo, Alnus
rubra, Platanus racemosa
, and
Robinia pseudoacacia
); since then, repeated collections in Dade and Broward counties suggest that
E. fornicatus
is solidly established in the southern tip of Florida (
Haack, 2006
;
Thomas, 2005
).
This Old World species is notorious as a pest of tea (“the shot-hole borer of tea”), in
Sri Lanka
and southern
India
, Borneo, and Java; elsewhere, it is a pest in plantations, recently reforested plots, and nurseries (
Browne, 1961
; CAB International, 2005a;
Kalshoven, 1958
). Most attacks are to twigs and small branches or stems.
Euwallacea fornicatus
seems to be much less abundant than the previously discussed species, with very few specimens yet known despite the intensive sampling of wood-boring insects at the collection sites.
As
with
X. crassiusculus
, we cannot say if the disjunct distribution (northeast
Costa Rica
–central
Panama
) reflects lack of sampling in the intervening region or separate populations resulting from multiple introductions.
Wood (2007)
reports a series of specimens from Manaus,
Brasil
, but with no collection data.