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| Citrus Leafminer   Phyllocnistis citrella Stainton --
  Lepidoptera:  Gracillariidae     | 
 
 
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|          This
  leafminer was first discovered in Florida in 1993 and subsequently spread to
  Louisiana and Texas.  It invaded
  Australia, South Africa, parts of West and East Africa, the Mediterranean
  area, Saudi Arabia to India, the Caribbean Islands,      Central America, Mexico and South America.  In 2000, it became established in southern
  California, and has since spread northward into all major citrus growing
  areas of the state.  These small moths
  can cause infestations of 90% in some areas. 
  Its arrival in southern California was believed to be from
  Mexico.  However, the native home of
  the leafminer is unclear, although Southeast Asia is suspected.          Adults
  of the citrus leafminer are tiny moths (4 mm wingspread) with white and
  silvery scales on the forewings, with several black and tan markings, plus a
  black spot on each wingtip.  The hind
  wings and body are white, with long fringe scales extending from the hind
  wing margins.  The moth appears much
  smaller when at rest (about 2mm).  The
  head is very smooth-scaled and white and the haustellum has no basal
  scales.  Citrus leafminer is most
  easily detected by its meandering serpentine larval mine, usually on the
  ventral side of the leaf. Larvae are minute (to 3 mm), translucent greenish
  yellow, and located inside the leaf mine. 
  The pupa occurs is in a pupal cell at the leaf margin.  Adults generally are too minute to be
  easily noticed, and are active diurnally and evenings.           The
  larvae make serpentine mines in tender new leaves of all varieties of
  citrus.  The mining causes the new
  flush to twist and curl and prevents it from expanding fully.  Developmental time is about three weeks,
  and as many as 7-8 generations occur in California.  In Florida, where bacterial canker is present, leaf mining
  activity creates opportunities for canker to enter, increasing the incidence
  of this disease.  In California, thus
  far, the damage has been primarily to nursery trees and new plantings because
  the larvae must have young citrus foliage to mine and feed on.  The period of infestation of mature citrus
  has been mainly in the fall months. 
  Mature citrus trees, except for coastal lemons, can tolerate heavy
  fall flush damage with little impact to fruit production.  Coastal lemons have continuous flushing of
  leaves and produce multiple crops of fruit. 
  The continuous flushing allows prolonged infestations of the leafminer
  that reduce tree vigor and fruit production.           Control with insecticides is not
  very effective and very destructive to balances of effective natural enemies
  that were introduced earlier in citrus orchards for the control of other
  pests.  Local species of parasitoids
  adapt quickly to the mines created by this insect.  Thus, in time the infestations decline to noneconomic levels
  unless disturbances such as insecticidal spraying occurs.               Parasitoids reported for the citrus
  leafminer include 39 species from Southeastern Asia, Japan, and Australia,
  mostly Chalcidoidea (Heppner 1993; Kalshoven 1981; Lo and Chiu 1988).  A pheromone to attract males of the
  leafminer has been developed in Japan by Ando et al. (1985), called (7Z,
  11Z)-7,11-hexadecadienal.  Most work
  has been done using chemical control, especially in India. Various spray
  regimes, timing of growth flushes, and promotion of biological control are
  recommended in Australia (Beattie 1989). 
  In Florida, chemical control recommendations are still being explored,
  but biological control and semiochemical trapping may be the most likely
  methods to help reduce populations of citrus leafminer in the long run.   REFERENCES:                                                                                               FURTHER RELATED REFERENCES   Ando, T., K. Y. Taguchi, M. Uchiyama, T. Ujiye  & H. Kuroko.  1985.  (7Z-11Z)-7,11-hexadecadienal:
  sex attractant of the citrus leafminer moth, Phyllocnistis
  citrella Stainton (Lepidoptera, Phyllocnistidae).  Agric.Biol. Chem. Tokyo 49:  3633-3653.    Badawy, A. 
  1967.  The morphology and
  biology of Phyllocnistis citrella
  Strait, a citrus leaf-miner in the Sudan. 
  Bull. Soc. Ent. Egypte 51:95-103.    Beattie, G.A.C.  1989. 
  Citrus Leaf miner.  New South
  Wales Agric. and Fisheries, Agfact, H2.AE 
  4:  1-4.    Chiu, S. C. 
  1985.  Biological control of
  citrus pests in Taiwan.  Taiwan Agric.
  Res. Inst., Spec. Rep. 19:  1-8.    Clausen, Curtis
  P.  1927. 
  The citrus insects of Japan. 
  USDA, Washington, D.C. Tech. Bul. 15: 
  1-15.    Clausen, Curtis
  P.  1931. 
  Two citrus leaf miners of the Far East.  USDA, Washington, D.C. Tech. Bull. 252:  1-13.    Clausen, Curtis P.  1933.  The citrus
  insects of tropical Asia.  USDA,
  Washington, D.C. Cir. 266:  1-35.    Commonwealth Agriculture Bureaux (CAB),
  Commonwealth Institute of Entomology. 1970.  Phyllocnistis
  citrella Stnt. IN: Distribution maps of pests. Ser. A, Map No 274. The Eastern Press Ltd., London.    Fletcher, T. B. 
  1920.  Life histories of Indian
  insects.  Microlepidoptera. Mem. Dept.
  Agric. India 6:  1-217,
  68 pl.    Heppner, J. B.  1993.  Citrus Leafminer, Phyllocnistis citrella, in Florida
  (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae: Phyllocnistinae).  Trop. Lepid. 4:  49-64.    Hill, G. F. 
  1918.  History of citrus canker
  in the Northern Territory (with notes of its occurrence elsewhere).  N. Terr. Austr. Bull.
  18:  1-8.    Ichtiar Baru
  Margabandhu, V.  1933. 
  Insect pests of oranges in the northern Circars.  Madras Agric. J.  21:  60-68.    Lal, K.B.  1950. 
  Insect-pests of fruit trees grown in the plains.  Agric. Anim. Husb. Uttar Pradesh 1:  30-45.    Latif, A. 
  &  C. M. Yunus.  1951. 
  Food plants of citrus leaf miner in Punjab.  Bull. Ent. Res. 42: 
  311-316.    Lo, K. C.  &  S.
  C. Chiu. 1988.  The illustrations of
  citrus insect pests and their natural enemies in Taiwan.  Taichung: Taiwan Agric. Res. Inst. 75 p.    Pandey. N. D. & Y. D. Pandey.  1964. 
  Bionomics of Phyllocnistis citrella
  Stt. (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae).  Indian J. Ent. 26: 
  417-423.    Pruthi, H. S.  & M. S. Mani.  1945. 
  Our knowledge of the insect and mine pests of the citrus in India and
  their control.  Imp. Council Agric.
  Res. Sci. Monog. 16:  1-42.    Reinking, O. A.,
  &  G. W. Groff.  1921. 
  The kao pan seedless Siamese pummelo and its culture.  Philipp. J.  Sci. 19:  389-437.    Sasscer, E. R.  1915. 
  Important insect pests collected on imported nursery stock in
  1914.   J. Econ. Ent.
  8:  268-270.    Stainton, H. T. 
  1856.  Descriptions of three
  species of Indian Micro-Lepidoptera. 
  Trans. Ent. Soc. London (n.s.) 3: 
  301-304.    Wilson, C. G. 
  1991.  Notes on Phyllocnistis citrella Stainton
  (Lepidoptera: Phyllocnistidae) attacking four citrus varieties in
  Darwin.  J. Austr. Ent. Soc. 30:  77-78.       El-Heneidy, A. H.  &  Fawzia A. Hawwanein.  1986.  Meteorus
  gyrator  Thunberg and M. rubens Nees. (Hymenoptera:
  Braconidae),  new recorded
  parasitoids, on certain lepidopterous pests in Egypt.  Zeitschrift angewandete
  Entomologie (1986).    Hawwanein,
  Fawzia A. & A. H.  El-Heneidy.  1988. 
  Comparative study of the parasitism by Microplitis rufiventris Kok. (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) and
  Periboae orbate Wied. (Diptera:
  Tachinidae) on main lepidopterous pests in vegetable crop fields in
  Egypt.  Bull. Soc. Ent. Egypte,  Econ. 
  Ser. 17:  127 - 135.   Hawwanein, Fawzia A., A. H. El-Heneidy; M. S. Abbas &
  A. R. Hamed, A. R.  1985.  Survey of the parasitoids of main
  lepidopterous pests in vegetable crop fields in Egypt.  Bull. Soc. Ent. Egypte, 65:  259 -265.   Honda,
  J. & S. V. Triapitzin.  1995a. A species
  description and biological comparison between a new species of Telenomus
  Haliday (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) and Trichogramma
  platneri Nagarkatti (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae): two egg
  parasitoids of Sabulodes aegrotata
  (Guene=E9) (Lepidoptera: Geometridae). 
  Pan-Pacific Entomol. 71 (4):  227-236.   Honda,
  J. & S. V. Triapitzin.  1995b. A species
  description and biological comparison between a new species of Telenomus
  Haliday (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) and Trichogramma
  platneri Nagarkatti (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae): two egg
  parasitoids of Sabulodes aegrotata  (Lepidoptera: Geometridae).  Pan-Pacific Entomologist 72 (3):  168-170.   Triapitzin, S. V. & T. M. Tretiakova.  1997. 
  Sexual behavior of Apanteles oenone
  Nixon (Hymenoptera, Braconidae), an exotic parasitoid of the pink bollworm, Pectinophora gossypiella (Saunders) (Lepidoptera, Gelechiidae). Russian
  Entomological Journal 6 (1-2):  71-72.   |