Bactrocera (Bactrocera) melanotus ( Coquillett, 1910 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.7300862 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A105F057-F2A4-4C14-B82E-14912B319D57 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D4F455-00BE-43A2-41BE-C97D28BE3B41 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) melanotus ( Coquillett, 1910 ) |
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Bactrocera (Bactrocera) melanotus ( Coquillett, 1910) View in CoL
(= Dacus rarotongae, Froggatt, 1910 )
Figure 45 View Figure 45
Distribution ( Fig. 103 View Figure 103 ). Cook Islands (Rarotonga, Mangaia, Mauke, Mitiaro, Atiu, Aitutaki).
Male lure. Cue-lure.
Host plants. Category B polyphagous fruit pest ( Vargas et al. 2015) bred from 31 host species in 18 families. ANA- CARDIACEAE: Mangifera indica . ANNONACEAE : Annona cherimola , A. squamosa . ARALIACEAE : Meryta pauciflora . CALOPHYLLACEAE : Calophyllum inophyllum . CARICACEAE : Carica papaya . COMBRETACEAE : Terminalia catappa . FABACEAE : Inocarpus fagifer . GENTIANACEAE : Fagraea berteroana . LAURACEAE : Persea americana . MELASTOMATACEAE : Melastoma sp. MORACEAE : Artocarpus altilis , A. heterophyllus . MYRTA- CEAE: Eugenia uniflora , Psidium cattleianum , P. guajava , Syzygium cumini , S. jambos . OXALIDACEAE : Averrhoa carambola . ROSACEAE : Eriobotrya japonica . RUBIACEAE : Coffea arabica , Guettarda speciosa , Morinda citrifolia . RUTACEAE : Citrus maxima , C. paradisi , C. reticulata , C. sinensis . SAPOTACEAE : Manilkara zapota . SOLANA- CEAE: Solanum lycopersicum , S. mauritianum , S. melongena .
Edible hosts common names. Avocado, breadfruit, cherimoya, coffee, common guava, eggplant, grapefruit, jackfruit, Java plum, loquat, mango, noni, orange, papaya, pomelo, rose-apple, sapodilla, starfruit, strawberry guava, sugar-apple, Surinam cherry, Tahitian chestnut, tangerine, tomato, tropical almond.
Biology. Adults mate between late morning and early afternoon, with increasing light intensity (Allwood 1997). Rate of development was studied by Kassim (1993). At 27°C in papaya, egg hatch starts after 36 hours, 79% of larvae have reached second instar by 72 hours, 88% reached third instar by 120 hours, larval popping starts by 156 hours, and 88% have exited host by 168 hours. Adult longevity is 30 weeks under lab conditions. Oviposition starts after three weeks and peaks during weeks 6 to 9, and a female lays 318 eggs over 126 days. This species is more common inland than in coastal areas, unlike B. xanthodes , and population peaks occur in the cooler months of June and July ( Leweniqila et al. 1997b; Purea et al. 1997). Monthly trapping data illustrated on Figure 117 View Figure 117 , and published in Leweniqila et al. (1997b). It is parasitized by Fopius arisanus in the Cook Islands ( Vargas et al. 2012a).
Notes. Heat tolerance was studied in Cook Islands. Late eggs, near hatching time, are the most heat tolerant of all the species and development stages studied in the Pacific ( Waddell et al. 1997a, 1997b).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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