DRYOPHTHORINAE, Schoenherr, 1825
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5352880 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/963E8D58-D14B-936C-0BEF-BB8B947BFC34 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
DRYOPHTHORINAE |
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SUBFAMILY DRYOPHTHORINAE
TRIBE RHYNCHOPHORINI
SUBTRIBE RHYNCHOPHORINA
Rhynchophorus palmarum (Linnaeus) 1758: 377 View in CoL ( Curculio View in CoL ); Fleutiaux and Sallé 1890: 453; Hustache 1932: 376; Bennett and Alam 1985: 30; Perez-Gelabert 2008: 134. Distribution. Barbados, Cuba, Dominica, Guadeloupe, Hispaniola, Martinique, St. Vincent. USA (CA, TX), Mexico to Panama, South America View in CoL ; widespread New World. Notes. These large weevils are primarily associated with a wide variety of palms. According to Wattanapongsiri (1966), R. palmarum View in CoL has been associated with species of the palm genera Acrocomia, Attalaea View in CoL , Bactris View in CoL , Chrysalidocarpus , Cocos View in CoL (including coconut palm), Desmoncus View in CoL , Elaeis View in CoL (including oil palm), Euterpe View in CoL , Guilielma View in CoL , Manicaria View in CoL , Maximiliana , Oreodoxa , Ricinus View in CoL , and Sabal View in CoL as well as Gynerium View in CoL and Saccharum View in CoL (sugar cane) (Graminae), Carica View in CoL and Jaracatia (Caricaeae) , Ananas View in CoL (pineapple) ( Bromeliaceae View in CoL ) and Musa View in CoL (banana) ( Scitamineae ). Adult females lay eggs in the base of leaf sheaths, terminal shoots or in cuts made in the trunk. Larvae tunnel through the softest parts of the trunk, generally destroying the heart. Once they have finished feeding the top of the palm is weakened and may topple. Larvae prepare a cocoon around themseves inside the base of the trunk made from the fibers in the stem The species develops throughout the year. The complete life cycle varies from 45 to180 days depending on location. Economic significance. This species is a serious pest of coconut palms and other crops including banana, papaya, cacao, and sugarcane throughout Central and South America View in CoL and the West Indies. Damage is due to the feeding habits of the larvae which generally weaken the trunk to the point at which the plant is easily broken or toppled.
SUBTRIBE SPHENOPHORINA
Metamasius hemipterus (Linnaeus) 1758: 377 View in CoL ( Curculio View in CoL ); Fleutiaux and Sallé 1890: 454; Hustache 1932: 380; Ivie et al. 2008b: 276; Perez-Gelabert 2008: 137. = M. sericeus Olivier 1807: 84 ; Blackwelder 1944-1957: 913. Distribution. Antigua, Barbados, Bequia, Dominica, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Martinique, Montserrat, Puerto Rico, St. Croix, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, St. Thomas, St. Vincent. Mexico to Panama, South America View in CoL ; widespread Antilles and Latin America View in CoL . Notes. The West Indian sugarcane borer ( Vaurie 1966). This species is associated with a variety of monocot plants, especially those that are rotting, broken, damaged or weakened. Banana and sugarcane are the two plants most frequently mentioned in the literature. The species has also been recorded from coconut and royal palm sheaths, stumps of Iriartea ventricosa Martius View in CoL and Jessenia batua Burret in Brazil, and has been intercepted at customs in a stem of a species of Chamaedorea View in CoL . In Costa Rica, numerous adults have been collected on fermenting palm trunks. Adults have also been recorded on a variety of rotting fruits. Economic significance. Woodruff and Baranowski (1985) report that there is debate over the economic status of this species. Certainly the species has been associated with both banana and sugarcane but its impact, especially on the former, is uncertain. The beetles appear to prefer unhealthy or injured plants and thus may not be primary pests but rather of a secondary nature. Nevertheless, adult feeding and larval infestations cause serious damage, at least in sugarcane, especially if the plants have already been damaged by other insects or rats. Populations may build in damaged plants left out to rot and may reinfest subsequent crops.
Metamasius maurus (Gyllenhal) 1838: 912 ( Sphenophorus View in CoL ); O’Brien and Wibmer 1982: 218. Distribution. Dominica, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Croix, St. Vincent; Lesser Antilles endemic. Notes. Vaurie (1966) reports specimens (including larvae and pupal cells) taken from rotting trunks of banana in Martinique. No larvae have been found in healthy trunks and it has been suggested that this species could prove useful in hastening decomposition of old trunks.
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DRYOPHTHORINAE
Peck, Stewart B. 2010 |
Chrysalidocarpus
H.Wendland 1878 |
Desmoncus
C.F.P.Martius 1824 |
Guilielma
C.F.P.Martius 1824 |
Maximiliana
C.F.P.Martius 1824 |
M. sericeus
Olivier 1807: 84 |
Manicaria
J.Gaertner 1791 |
Elaeis
N.J.Jacquin 1763 |
Sabal
Adanson 1763 |