| PEST MANAGEMENT AND THE ENVIRONMENT  E. F. Legner Professor of Biological Control University of California eflbio@outlook.com   Summary             Improvements in the successful pest management of the
  agricultural ecosystem and public health sectors calls for an overhaul of
  current procedures.  The availability
  of specialist personnel to encourage effective management measures backed by
  technical research is indispensable. 
  Without surveillance management tends to descend to environmentally
  ineffective or harmful practices, and scheduled routines that do not respond
  to periodic environmental changes are counterproductive to sound
  management.  Inadequacies of current
  practices in several examples illustrate the need for research institutions
  to augment their participation in management and a return to research funding
  by unbiased sources. -------------------------------------------           Pest management is a broad concept
  that involves considerations of genetics, climate, ecology, natural enemies
  and cultural or chemical applications. 
  Therefore, it is difficult to define this category exactly.  A high level of sophistication is required
  to manage events in the environment for the efficient production of food and
  fiber and the abatement of public health and nuisance pests.  A principal objective to the addition of
  sound environmental management is the reduction of pesticide usage albeit at
  the irritation of large commercial interests (Garcia & Legner 1999,
  Pimentel et al. 1991).             Although scientific investigations in colleges and
  universities have led to a high level of production and pest abatement,
  deployment continues to face obstacles that are largely related to the
  absence of competent supervisory personnel. 
  As expertise resides largely in the research community this group is
  encumbered by an academic system that continues to stress research and teaching
  and to minimize the deployment aspect. 
  The most successful programs in environmental management regularly
  require five or more years to develop. 
  Investigator survival in the system demands frequent publication, but
  not in the kind of journals that stress implementation. This distracts from
  the ultimate goal of deployment, which diminishes the amount of time an
  investigator has to be directly involved in an advisory capacity.  Several examples of successful projects
  that have receded in the absence of this supervision but which could be reactivated
  with the proper advisory personnel present, will explain some of the problems
  and difficulties involved.   Navel Orangeworm
  Management in Almond Orchards            The
  almond industry in California has suffered from the invasion of the navel orangeworm, Amyelois transitella (Walker), from Mexico and South America.  Two external insect larval parasites, Goniozus legneri Gordh and Goniozus emigratus (Rohwer) and one internal egg-larval parasite, Copidosomopsis plethorica Caltagirone, which
  are dominant on the pest in south Texas, Mexico, Uruguay and Argentina, were
  successfully established in irrigated and nonirrigated almond orchards in
  California (Caltagirone 1966, Legner & Silveira-Guido 1983). 
  Separate k-value analyses indicated significant regulation of their
  navel orangeworm host during the warm summer season.  There is a diapause (hibernation) in the
  host triggered by several seasonally varying factors, and a diapause in the
  parasites triggered by hormonal changes in the host.  Possible latitudinal effects on diapause
  (hibernation) also are present.  The
  ability of the imported parasites to diapause with their host enables their
  permanent establishment and ability to reduce host population densities to
  below economic levels (Legner 1983).             Although
  navel orangeworm infestations have decreased with the establishment of the
  three parasites (Legner & Gordh 1992),
  the almond reject levels are not always below the economic threshold of
  4%.  Such rejects are sometimes due to
  other causes, such as ant damage and fungus infections.  In certain years, the peach tree borer, Synanthedon
  exitiosa (Say), has been involved as its attacks stimulates oviposition
  by navel orangeworm moths and subsequent damage attributed to the latter.             In some orchards, the growers have
  sustained a reject level of 2 ˝ percent or less through 2008.  Storing rejected almond mummies in
  ventilated sheds through winter allows for a build up of natural enemies and
  their subsequent early entry into the fields to reduce orangeworm populations
  before the latter have an opportunity to increase.  Commercial insectaries have harvested Goniozus legneri
  from orchards for introductions elsewhere. 
  Copidosomopsis plethoricus and Goniozus legneri, and
  to a lesser extent Goniozus emigratus successfully
  overwinter in orchards year after year. 
  However, only Copidosomopsis
  can consistently be recovered at all times of the year.  The Goniozus
  species are not recovered in significant numbers until early summer.  Therefore, pest management in almond
  orchards may require  periodic
  releases of Goniozus legneri to reestablish balances that were
  disrupted by insecticidal drift or by the absence of overwintering rejected
  almond refuges through aggressive sanitation practices.  Although sanitation in this case may
  appeal to the grower, it is a costly procedure that also disrupts natural
  balances at low pest densities.              Goniozus legneri has been reared from codling moth and oriental
  fruit moth in peaches in addition to navel orangeworm from almonds.  A reservoir of residual almonds that
  remain in the trees after harvest is desirable to maintain a synchrony of
  these parasites with navel orangeworms in order to achieve the lowest pest
  densities.  In fact such reservoirs
  often exceed 1,000 residual almonds per tree through the winter months, and produce
  navel orangeworm densities at harvest that are below 1% on soft-shelled
  varieties.  Superimposed upon the
  system is the diapausing mechanism in both the navel orangeworm and the
  parasites (Legner 1983).  All of these forces must be considered for
  a sound, reliable integrated management. 
  Almond producers have to make reasonable decisions on whether or not
  to remove residual almonds, a very costly procedure, or to use within season
  insecticidal sprays.  But orchard
  managers rarely understand population stability through the interaction of
  natural enemies and their prey.  Because the
  management of this pest with parasitic insects depends heavily on the
  perpetuation of parasites in orchards it can only be accomplished by an
  understanding of the dynamics involved. 
  Storing rejected almonds in protective shelters during winter months
  increases parasite abundance.  This
  allows the parasites to reproduce in large numbers for subsequent spread
  throughout an orchard in the spring when outdoor temperatures rise.  Complete sanitation of an orchard by
  removal of all rejected almonds is counter productive to successful
  management as this also eliminates natural enemies.   Australian Bushfly
  Management in Micronesia            Pestiferous
  flies in the Marshall Islands provide a classic example of the adaptation of
  invading noxious insects to an area with a salubrious climate.  With nearly perfect temperature-humidity
  conditions for their development, an abundance of carbohydrate and
  protein-rich food in the form of organic wastes and excreta provided by
  humans and their animals, and a general absence of effective natural enemies,
  several species were able to reach maximum numbers.              There are
  principally four types of pestiferous flies in Kwajalein Atoll of the
  Marshall Islands, with the African-Australian bush fly, Musca sorbens
  Wiedemann, being by far the most pestiferous species.  The common housefly, Musca domestica
  L., of lesser importance, frequents houses and is attracted to food in
  recreation areas. The remaining two types are the Calliphoridae [Chrysomya
  megacephala (Fab.), and (Wiedemann)], and the Sarcophagidae [Parasarcophaga
  misera (Walker), and Phytosarcophaga gressitti Hall and Bohart). These
  latter species are abundant around refuse disposal sites and wherever rotting
  meat and decaying fish are available. Most of the fly species differ from the
  common housefly and the bush fly in being more sluggish and noisy and by
  their general avoidance of humans. Because residents do not distinguish the
  different kinds of flies, nonpestiferous types are often blamed as nuisances
  when in fact they may be considered to fulfill a useful role in the
  biodegradation of refuse and rotting meat.              An initial
  assessment of the problem led to the expedient implementation of breeding
  source reduction to reduce the housefly, Musca
  domestica L., and both the Calliphoridae and Sarcophagidae to
  inconspicuous levels.  These involved
  slight modifications of refuse disposal sites to disfavor fly breeding. These
  simple measures resulted in an estimated 1/3rd reduction of total flies
  concentrating around beaches and residential areas. Because the housefly
  especially enters dwellings, its reduction was desirable for the general
  health of the community, and fly annoyances indoors diminished.  Thorough surveys of breeding sites and
  natural enemy complexes revealed that Musca sorbens reduction would
  not be quickly forthcoming, however. A schedule of importation of natural
  enemies was begun and other integrated management approaches were
  investigated: e.g. baiting and breeding habitat reduction.               Bush Fly Origin
  and Habits. -- This species is known as the bazaar fly in North Africa, a
  housefly in India, and the bush fly in Australia (Yu 1971). It was first
  described from Sierra Leone in West Africa in 1830 where it is a notorious
  nuisance to humans and animals. The flies are attracted to wounds, sores, and
  skin lesions, searching for any possible food sources such as blood and other
  exudations. Although not a biting species, its habits of transmitting eye
  diseases, enteric infections, pathogenic bacteria and helminth eggs make it a
  most important and dangerous public health insect (Bell 1969, Greenberg 1971,
  Hafez and Attia 1958, McGuire and Durant 1957)             The bush fly has
  spread through a major portion of the Old World, Africa and parts of Asia
  (Van Emden 1965). In Oceania its distribution is in AustraIia (Paterson and
  Norris 1970); New Guinea (Paterson and Norris 1970); Samoa and Guam (Harris
  and Down 1946); and the Marshall Islands (Bohart and Gressitt 1951). In
  Hawaii Joyce first reported it in 1950. Later Hardy (1952) listed it in the Catalog
  of Hawaiian Diptera, and Wilton (1963) reported its predilection
  for dog excrement.  The importance of
  bush fly increased in the 1960's when it was incriminated as a potential
  vector of Beta-haemolytic streptococci in an epidemic of acute
  glomerulonephritis (Bell 1969).               On the islands of
  Kwajalein Atoll a substantial portion of the main density of Musca sorbens
  emanated from dog, pig and human feces. 
  Inspections of pig droppings in the bush of 10 widely separated islets
  revealed high numbers of larvae (over 100 per dropping), making this dung, as
  in Guam (Bohart and Gressitt 1951), a primary breeding source in the Atoll.
  Pigs that are corralled on soil or concrete slabs concentrate and trample
  their droppings making them less suitable breeding sites. In such situations
  flies were only able to complete their development along the periphery of
  corrals.  Coconut husks placed under
  pigs in corrals results in the production of greater numbers of flies by
  reducing the effectiveness of trampling. 
  Kitchen and other organic wastes were not found to breed M. sorbens,
  although a very low percentage of the adult population could originate there
  judging from reports elsewhere. Nevertheless, this medium is certainly not
  responsible for producing a significant percentage of the adult densities
  observed in the Atoll.               Management
  Efforts Worldwide. -- Successful partial reduction of bush fly had been
  achieved only in Hawaii through a combination of the elimination of breeding
  sites, principally dog droppings, and the activities of parasitic and
  predatory insects introduced earlier to combat other fly species, e.g., Musca
  domestica (Legner 1978). The density of-bush fly
  varies in different climatic zones in Hawaii, but the importance of this fly
  is minimal compared to Kwajalein. At times hymenopterous parasites have been
  found to parasitize over 95% of flies sampled in the Waikiki area (H-S. Yu,
  unpublished data).  Other parts of
  Oceania were either not suitable for the maximum effectiveness of known parasitic
  species (e.g. Australia) or the principal breeding habitats were not
  attractive to the natural enemies. Therefore, in Australia a concerted effort
  has been made to secure scavenger and predatory insects from southern Africa
  that are effective in the principal unmanageable fly producing source, range
  cattle and sheep dung (Bornemissza 1970).              Kwajalein Atoll.
  -- Integrated fly management had reached a level of partial success by 1974.
  Initial surveys for natural enemies of M. sorbens revealed the
  presence of four scavenger and predatory insects, the histerid Carcinops
  troglodytes Erichson, the nitidulid Carpophilus pilosellus
  Motschulsky, the tenebrionid Alphitobius diaperinus (Panzer), and the
  dermapteran Labidura riparia (Pallas). Dog numbers were significantly
  reduced and all privies were reconstructed or improved on one island,
  Ebeye.  Dogs were reduced or tethered
  on Kwajalein Island and refuse fish, etc., disposed of thoroughly on
  l1leginni and other islands with American residents.   Importations of natural enemies were made
  throughout the Atoll, and the average density of M. sorbens on Ebeye was subsequently reduced from an estimated
  8.5 flies attracted to the face per minute, to less than 0.5 flies per
  minute, which was readily appreciated by the inhabitants.  The single most important cause appeared
  to be the partial elimination of breeding sources, with natural enemies
  playing a secondary role.             For the further
  reduction of bush fly numbers the integration of a nondestructive
  insecticidal reduction measure was desirable.  Sugar bait mixtures that have been used for houseflies in years
  previous to 1972 were wholly ineffective for killing adult M. sorbens
  due to their almost complete lack of attractiveness.  However, a variety of decomposing
  foodstuffs including rotting eggs and rotting fish sauces were very highly
  attractive. Experiments using a 6-day old mixture of one-part fresh whole
  eggs to one part water (Legner et al. 1974) attracted
  over 50,000 bush flies that were then killed by a 0.5 ppm Dichlorvos (R)
  additive.  The poisoned mixture was
  poured in quantities of 100 mI. each in flat plastic trays with damp sand at
  20 sites in the shade and spaced every 10 meters along a public beach on
  Kwajalein.  Baits placed above the
  height of 1m or against walls in open pavilions were only weakly attractive.
  After 48 hours, flies were reduced to inconspicuous levels all over Kwajalein
  Island.  This condition endured for at
  least three days after which newly emerging and immigrating flies managed to
  slowly increase to annoying levels as the baits ceased to be attractive. But
  the former density of flies was never reached even one week after the
  baiting; and these populations were subsequently reduced to even lower levels
  by applying additional fresh poisoned baits.              Baiting was
  extended to other islands in the Atoll with the result of sustained
  reductions of bush flies to below general annoyance levels (less than 0.01
  attracted per minute on Kwajalein, Roi-Namur, Illeginni and Meck Islands.)  A new attractant that augmented the
  rotting egg mixture consisted of beach sand soaked for one week in the
  decomposing body fluids of buried sharks. This new attractant was far
  superior to rotting eggs both in rate and time of attraction, the latter
  sometimes exceeding 5 days. The baiting method could be used effectively if
  applied initially twice a week, and only biweekly applications were necessary
  in the following months.             After January
  2000 in the absence of specialist supervision the baiting procedure in the
  Atoll has not continued with the sophistication initially determined
  necessary.  In the absence of
  supervision the flies were not adequately reduced.  Periodic personnel changes precluded the passing on of accurate
  information critical to managing the fly densities.  Of vital importance is habitat reduction, the proper
  preparation of baits and the latter’s placement in shaded wind calm areas of
  the islands.  Because such sites are
  generally out of sight of the public, baiting has rather shifted to populated
  areas where only very conspicuous but nonpestiferous species of flies are
  attracted to the baits in large numbers. 
  Sometimes even ammonia baits were substituted that attract harmless
  blow fly species but not the targeted bush fly.   Aquatic Weed Management
  by Fish in Irrigation Systems           
  Imported fish species have been used for clearing aquatic vegetation
  from waterways, which has also reduced mosquito & chironomid midge
  abundance.  In the irrigation systems,
  storm drainage channels and recreational lakes of southern California, the
  California Department of Fish and Game authorized the introduction of three
  species of African cichlids, Tilapia zillii
  (Gervais), Oreochromis (Sarotherodon) mossambica
  (Peters), and Oreochromis (Sarotherodon) hornorum
  (Trewazas). These became established over some 2,000 ha. of waterways (Legner
  & Sjogren 1984). Their establishment reduced the biomass of emergent
  aquatic vegetation that was slowing down the distribution of irrigation water
  but that also provided a habitat for such encephalitis vectors as the
  mosquito Culex tarsalis Coquillet.  Previous aquatic  weed  reduction
  practices had required an expensive physical removal of vegetation and/or the
  frequent application of herbicides.            
  One species, Tilapia zillii can reduce mosquito populations by
  a combination of direct predation and the consumption of aquatic plants by
  these omnivorous fishes (Legner & Fisher 1980; Legner & Murray 1981,
  Legner & Pelsue 1983). As Legner & Sjogren (1984) indicated, this is
  a unique example of persistent biological suppression and probably only
  applicable for relatively stable irrigation systems where a permanent water
  supply is assured, and where water temperatures are warm enough in winter to
  sustain the fish (Legner et al. 1980). A three-fold advantage
  in the use of these fish is (1) clearing of vegetation to keep waterways
  open, (2) mosquito abatement and (3) a fish large enough to be used for human
  consumption. However, optimum management of these cichlids for aquatic weed reduction
  often is not understood by irrigation district personnel (Hauser et al.
  1976, 1977; Legner 1978), with the result that competitive displacement by
  inferior cichlids minimize or eliminate T. zillii,
  the most efficient weed eating species (Legner 2000).             The three imported fish species varied in
  their influence in different parts of the irrigation system.  Each fish species possessed certain
  attributes for combating the respective target pests (Legner & Medved 1973a,
  b). Tilapia zillii was best able to perform both
  as a habitat reducer and an insect predator. It also had a slightly greater
  tolerance to low water temperatures, which guaranteed the survival of large
  populations through the winter months; while at the same time it did not pose
  a threat to salmon and other game fisheries in the colder waters of central
  California. It was the superior game species and most desirable as human
  food.  Nevertheless, the agencies supporting the
  research (mosquito abatement and county irrigation districts) acquired and
  distributed all three species simultaneously throughout hundreds of
  kilometers of the irrigation system, storm drainage channels and recreational
  lakes. The outcome was the permanent and semi permanent establishment of the
  two less desirable species, S. mossambica and S.
  hornorum over a broader portion of the distribution range. This
  was achieved by the competitively advantaged Sarotherodon species that
  mouth-brood their fry, while T. zillii did not have this
  attribute strongly developed. It serves as an example of competitive
  exclusion such as conjectured by Ehler (1982). In the clear waters of some
  lakes in coastal and southwestern California, the intense predatory behavior
  of S. mossambica males on the fry of T.
  zillii could be easily observed, even though adults of the
  latter species gave a strong effort to fend off these attacks.               This outcome was not too serious for
  chironomid reduction in storm drainage channels because the Sarotherodon
  species are quite capable of permanently suppressing chironomid densities to
  below annoyance levels (Legner et al. 1980). However, for the management of
  aquatic weeds, namely Potamogeton pectinatus L., Myriophyllum
  spicatum var. exalbescens (Fernald) Jepson, Hydrilla
  verticillata Royle and Typha species, they showed
  little capability (Legner & Medved 1973b). Thus, competition excluded T.
  zillii from expressing its maximum potential in the irrigation
  channels of the lower Sonoran Desert and in recreational lakes of
  southwestern California. Furthermore, as the Sarotherodon
  species were of a more tropical nature, their populations were reduced in the
  colder waters of the irrigation canals and recreational lakes. Although T.
  zillii populations could have been restocked, attention was
  later focused on a potentially more environmentally destructive species, the
  White Amur, Ctenopharyngodon idella
  (Valenciennes), and other carps. The competitively advantaged Sarotherodon
  species are permanently established over a broad geographic area, which
  encumbers the reestablishment of T. zillii in storm drainage channels
  of southwestern California.    Managment of Filth Fly
  Abundance in Dairies and Poultry Houses            The most
  important of muscoid fly species are broadly defined as those most closely
  associated with human activities. Breeding habitats very from the organic
  wastes of urban and rural settlements to those provided by various
  agricultural practices, particularly ones related to the management and care
  of domestic animals. Their degree of relationship to humans varies
  considerably with the ecology and behavior of the fly species involved. Some
  are more often found inside dwellings.             Research to
  reduce fly abundance has centered on the highly destructive parasitic and
  predatory species, such as the encyrtid Tachinaephagus zealandicus
  Ashmead, five species of the pteromalid genus Muscidifurax,  and Spalangia species that
  destroy dipterous larvae and pupae in various breeding sources.   The natural enemies are capable of
  successful fly suppression if the correct species and strains are applied in
  the right locality (Axtell & Rutz 1986, Legner et al. 1981 , Mandeville et al. 1988, Pawson
  & Petersen 1988). Other approaches have included the use of pathogens and
  predatory mites, and inundative releases of parasites and predators (Ripa
  1986, 1990). Although partially successful, none of these strategies have
  become the sole method for fly abatement, and the choice of a ineffective
  parasite strain may have detrimental results (Legner 1978). Instead, the focus is on integrated
  management including habitat reduction, adult baiting and aerosol treatments
  with short residual insecticides. Also, it is generally agreed that existing
  predatory complexes exert great influences on fly densities (Geden &
  Axtell 1988) and that many natural enemies of these flies have a potential to
  significantly reduce their abundance if managed properly (Legner 2000,
  Mullens 1986, Mullens et al. 1986).  Because climatic and locality differences dictate which
  abatement strategies are effective, simple instructions to the public are
  impossible and the involvement of skilled personnel is required.  Of primary importance for successful
  management is the provision of relatively stable breeding habitats and their
  natural enemy complexes.  Periodic
  cleaning operations should stress the partial removal of breeding sites and
  the deposition of such waste into large stacks that favors the generation of
  destructive heat while minimizing the area and attractiveness for fly
  oviposition.  Nevertheless, this
  management procedure is difficult for abatement personnel to grasp in the
  absence of competent supervision.     KEY  REFERENCES:   Axtell,
  R. C. & D. A. Rutz.  1986.  Role of parasites and predators as
  biological control agents in poultry production facilities.  Misc. Publ. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 61:  88-100.   Bell, T. D., 1969. Epidemic glomerulonephritis in Hawaii. Rep.
  Pediat. Serv., Dep. Med., Tripler Army Hospital, Honolulu, Hawaii. Mimeo. 25
  p.   Bohart, G. E. and J. L. Gressitt, 1951. Filth inhabiting flies of
  Guam. Bull. B. P. Bishop Museum, Honolulu No.204: 152 p, 17 plates.   Bornemissza, G. F., 1970. Insectary studies on the control of
  dung breeding flies by the activity of the dung beetle, Onthophagus gazella F
  . (Coleoptera: Scarbaeinae). J. Aust. Ent. Soc. 9: 31-41.   Caltagirone, L. E.  1966.  A new Pentalitomastix from Mexico.  The Pan Pacific Entomol. 42:  145-151.   Ehler, L. E.  1982.  Foreign
  exploration in California.  Environ. Ent. 11: 
  525-30.   Garcia, R. & E. F. Legner.  1999.  Biological control of medical and
  veterinary pests. In:  T. W. Fisher & T. S. Bellows, Jr.
  (eds.), Chapter  15, p. 935-953, Handbook of Biological Control:  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, CA  1046 P.   Geden, C. J. & R. C. Axtell.  1988. 
  Predation by Carcinops
  pumilio (Coleoptera:
  Histeridae) and Macrocheles muscaedomesticae (Acarina:
  Macrochelidae) on the housefly (Diptera: Muscidae):  Functional response, effects of temperature and availability of
  alternative prey.  Environ. Entomol. 17: 
  739-44.   Greenberg, B., 1971. Flies and Disease. Vol. I. Ecology , Classification
  and Biotic Associations. Princeton Univ. Press. Princeton, N .J .856 p.   Hafez, M. and M. A. Attia, 1958. Studies on the ecology of Musca
  sorbens Wied. in Egypt. Bull. Soc. Ent. Egypt 42: 83-121.   Hardy, D. E., 1952. Additions and corrections to Bryan's check
  list of the Hawaiian Diptera. Proc. Hawaiian Ent. Soc. 14(3): 443-84.   Harris, A. H. and H. A. Down, 1946. Studies of the
  dissemination of cysts and ova of human intestinal parasites by flies in
  various localities on Guam. Amer. J. Trop. Med. 26: 789-800.   Hauser, W. J., E. F. Legner, R. A. Medved
  & S. Platt.  1976.  Tilapia--a
  management tool for biological control of aquatic weeds and insects.  Bull. Amer. Fisheries Soc. 1:  15-16.   Hauser, W. J., E. F. Legner & F. E. Robinson.  1977. 
  Biological control of aquatic weeds by fish in irrigation
  channels.  Proc. Water Management for
  Irrigation and Drainage.  ASC/Reno, Nevada, Jul. 20-22:  pp 139-45.   Joyce, C. R., 1950. Notes and exhibitions. Proc.
  Hawaiian Ent. Soc. 16(3): 338.   Legner, E. F., 1978. Diptera. Medical and Veterinary Pests. 1012-19;
  1043-69. In: C. P. Clausen [ed.] , "Introduced Parasites and Predators of
  Arthropod Pests and Weeds: a Review." U.S. Dept. Agr. Tech. Rept.   Legner, E.
  F.  1983.  Patterns of field diapause in the navel orangeworm
  (Lepidoptera: Phycitidae) and three imported parasites.  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 76:  503-506.   Legner, E. F.  2000.  Biological
  control of aquatic Diptera.  p.
  847-870.  Contributions to a Manual of
  Palaearctic Diptera, Vol. 1, Science Herald, Budapest.  978 p.   Legner, E. F. & T. W. Fisher.  1980. 
  Impact of Tilapia zillii (Gervais) on Potamogeton pectinatus L., Myriophyllum
  spicatum var.  exalbescens
  Jepson, and mosquito reproduction in lower Colorado Desert irrigation
  canals.  Acta Oecologica, Oecol. Applic. 1(1):  3-14.   Legner, E. F. & G. Gordh.  1992.  Lower navel orangeworm
  (Lepidoptera: Phycitidae) population densities following establishment of Goniozus  legneri (Hymenoptera:
  Bethylidae) in  California.  J. Econ. Ent. 85(6):  2153-60.   Legner, E. F., D. J. Greathead & I.
  Moore.  1981.  Equatorial East African predatory and
  scavenger arthropods in bovine excrement. 
  Environ. Entomol. 10:  620-25.   Legner, E. F. & R. A. Medved.  1973a. 
  Influence of Tilapia mossambica (Peters), T. zillii (Gervais) (Cichlidae) and Mollienesia latipinna
  LeSueur (Poeciliidae) on pond populations of Culex mosquitoes and chironomid midges.   J. Amer. Mosq. Contr. Assoc. 33:  354-64.   Legner, E. F. & R. A. Medved. 
  1973b.  Predation of
  mosquitoes and chironomid midges in ponds by Tilapia zillii (Gervais)
  and T.  mossambica (Peters) (Teleosteii: Cichlidae). 
  Proc. Calif. Mosq. Contr. Assoc., Inc. 41:  119-121.   Legner, E. F. & C. A. Murray.  1981. 
  Feeding rates and growth of the fish Tilapia zillii [Cichlidae]
  on Hydrilla verticillata, Potamogeton
  pectinatus and Myriophyllum spicatum
  var. exalbescens and interactions
  in irrigation canals in southeastern California.  J. Amer. Mosq. Contr. Assoc. 41(2):  241-250.   Legner, E. F. & F. W. Pelsue, Jr.  1983. 
  Contemporary appraisal of the population dynamics of introduced
  cichlid fish in south California. 
  Proc. Calif. Mosq. & Vector Contr. Assoc., Inc. 51:  38-39. 
 Legner, E. F. & A. Silveira-Guido.  1983. 
  Establishment of Goniozus emigratus and Goniozus legneri [Hym:
  Bethylidae] on navel orangeworm,  Amyelois transitella [Lep: Phycitidae] in California and biological
  control potential.  Entomophaga 28: 
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