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| ASH WHITEFLY   Siphonius phillyraea  -- Homoptera, Aleyrodidae   (Contacts)          ------ CLICK on Photo to enlarge & search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                  GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases     
         
  Biological control investigators at the University of California,
  Riverside and in the California State Department of Food and Agriculture
  concluded that ash whitefly had invaded from the Old World and developed a
  plan to import parasitoids and predators from that part of the world.  Two Encarsia spp. nr. inaron
  were introduced, one from central Italy and the other from Israel, the latter
  being supplied by Dr. Dan Gerling of the University of Tel-Aviv  <PHOTO>.  These parasitoids
  were reared in California and distributed in 13 counties of California and
  Arizona.  Recoveries were made at all
  sites, but the Israel strain seemed to predominate.  A coccinellid predator, Clitostethus arcuatis
  was also released in five California counties, but only with limited
  recoveries (Bellows & Paine 1990). 
  With the establishment of these natural enemies in southern
  California, ash whitefly was scarcely noticeable by the public in autumn of
  1990.         
  By 1991 the ash whitefly had spread into central and northern
  California, and the natural enemies have been released against it.  It is expected that establishment will
  result in complete biological control. 
  Whether this is possible as the whitefly spread to other parts of
  North America is unknown, especially as the imported natural enemies
  originated in subtropical or warm temperate parts of the Old World.  However, natural enemies from temperate
  climates are known and their acquisition should not pose any difficulty.      REFERENCES:          [ Additional references may be found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]   Bellows, T.
  S. & T. D. Paine.  1990.  Distribution and biological evaluations of
  Encarsia sp. nr. inaron, parasitoid of ash
  whitefly, Siphonius phillyreae.  Progress Rept. to the Statewide UC IPM Project, Davis, CA.  13 p.   Bellows, T.
  S., Jr., T. D.  Paine, K-Y Arakawa, C. Meisenbacher, P. Leddy,  & J. Kabashima.  1990.  Biological control sought for ash whitefly.  California Agriculture, 44 (l): 
  4-6.   Bellows, T. S., T. D. Paine, & D. Gerling,  1992.  Development, survival, and fecundity of Clitstethus
  arcuatus (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) on Siphoninus phillyreae
  (Homoptera: Aleyrodiae) in the laboratory. 
  Environmental Entomology 21: 
  659-663.   Evans, G. A.  &  A. B. Hamon.  2002.  Whitefly
  taxonomic and ecological Web site: an on-line interactive catalog of the
  whiteflies (Hemiptera:Aleyrodidae) of the world and their parasites and predators.
  http://www.fscadpi.org /homoptera_hemiptera/ Whitefly/whitefly catalog.htm.   Gerling, D., O. T. S. Rottenberg 
  &  S. J. Bellows.  2004.  Role of Natural Enemies and Other Factors in the Dynamics of
  Field Populations of the Whitefly Siphoninus phillyreae (Haliday) in
  Introduced and Native Environments.  Biological Control 31:  199-209.      Haliday, A. H. 
  1835.   Aleyrodes phillyreae.   Entomology Magazine 2:  119-120.     Huffman, D.  &  K. A. Kidd.   2010.  
  Ash whitefly in North Carolina. 
  North Carolina State University
  Insect Notes 2010.      Mound, L. A.  1966.  A revision of the
  British Aleyrodidae (Hemiptera: Homoptera). 
  Bulletin of the British Museum   of National History,   Entomolgy 17:  419-420.   Mound,  L. A.  & 
  S. H. Halsey.  1978.  Whitefly of the World. A Systematic
  Catalogue of the Aleyrodidae (Homoptera) with Host Plant and Natural Enemy
  Data.  British Museum of Natural
  History) and John Wiley and Sons, New York, NY. pp. 192-193. Nechols, J. R.   1995.  
  Biological Control in the Western United States: Accomplishments and
  Benefits of Regional Research Project W-84, 1964-1989.  UCANR Publications. pp. 101–106.   Pickett, C. H.  &  M. J. Pitcairn.  1999.  Classical
  biological control of ash whitefly: factors contributing to its success in
  California.  Biocontrol 44:  143-158.   Sumner, Daniel A.
  &  Frank H. Buck, Jr.  2007. 
  Exotic Pests and Diseases: Biology and Economics for Biosecurity.  John Wiley & Sons. pp. 203–220.    Stocks, I..  &  Hodges G.   2010.  Ash whitefly, Siphoninus phillyreae
  (Haliday), a new exotic whitefly (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) in central Florida,
  and Encarsia inaron,
  its parasitoid (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae). 
  Florida Division of Plant Industry
  2010.   Viggiani, G. &  P.
  Mazzone.  1980.  Encarsia pseudopartenopea n.sp.,
  parassita di Siphoninus phillyreae (Haliday) (Hom. Aleyrodidae).   Bollettino el Laboratorio di Entomologia Agraria 'Filippo
  Silvestri'  37:  9-12.   Viggiani, G. &  D.
  Battaglia.   1983.  
  Le specie italiane del genere Eretmocerus Hald. (Hymenoptera:
  Aphelinidae).  Bolletino del
  Laboratorio di Entomologia Agraria 'Filippo Silvestri' 40:  97-101.           |