| I.  Gordh
  & Beardsley (1999) summarized the importance of various aspects of
  taxonomy relative to biological control. 
     A. 
  They defined taxonomy as that branch of biology which involves the
  naming, identifying and classifying of organisms.     B. 
  Previous emphasis had been placed on the importance of taxonomy to
  biological control by other researchers (Clausen 1942, Sabrosky 1955,
  Schlinger & Doutt 1964, Delucchi 1966, Compere 1969, Gordh 1977,
  1982).     C. 
  For applied biological control workers, there is a need for names for
  the natural enemies and hosts that are being deployed.  Such names provide an important mechanism
  for the dissemination of information. 
     D. 
  In theory taxonomy is important to biological control researchers
  because classification are developed which are intended to reflect
  evolutionary relationships.  Such
  classifications are helpful because they are intended to predict details of
  biology and distribution.     II.  History.   A. 
  The urge to arrange, organize, describe, name and classify is
  fundamental in human activity.  Such
  an urge operates at all levels of social organization.  In ancient civilizations names were applied
  to organisms, and the common names of many organisms are in widespread usage
  today.     B. 
  There are however several problems inherent in common names.      
  1.  Most serious is
  synonymy.  Frequently more than one
  common name is applied to a single organism (synonyms), or the same common
  name is used for different organisms (homonyms).  Synonymy creates confusion and misunderstanding because the
  biological characteristics and habits of similar organisms can differ greatly
  (Gordh & Beardsley 1999).      
  2.  In its earliest form, the
  scientific name given to an organism was often impractical.  Scientific names during the lifetime of
  John Ray (Wray) (1628-1705) consisted of a series of Latin adjectives
  catenated in such a way as to describe the animal.  The system was less ambiguous than the common name system, but
  it was cumbersome because the name of an animal frequently was several lines
  or a paragraph long.     C.  A
  major contribution in the naming of organisms was made by the natural
  historian and physician Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778), who is credited with
  developing the current binomial system of naming organisms.       1.  The start of zoological nomenclature is
  taken as the 10th Edition of Linnaeus' monumental work, Systema Naturae.      
  2.  The notable exception is
  the nomenclature of spiders which originates with the work of Karl Alexander
  Clerck (1710-1765), Aranei svecici.  The accepted date of publication of these
  contributions 1 Jan 1758, and this date is the official starting point of
  zoological nomenclature.   D. 
  During the following century taxonomic zoologists followed the lead of
  Linnaeus and prepared descriptions of species for publication but named the
  animal with a binomen.       1.  The binomen consists of two parts, the
  generic name and the specific epithet. 
  With the accumulation of taxonomic descriptions, problems developed
  with synonymy, homonymy, the inconsistent application of bionomens, and
  related nomenclatural difficulties.      
  2.  The first attempt to
  address these problems was the "Strickland Code," prepared in
  1846.  This code was developed by a
  panel of taxonomists, including Charles Darwin who was a noted taxonomist of
  barnacles.       3.  Subsequently, an International Code of
  Zoological Nomenclature was developed in 1906.  This code has been altered slightly, but continues to represent
  the basic guidelines for the formation and validation of zoological names for
  taxa.  The most recent revision was
  published in 1985 (Gordh & Beardsley 1999).  Complicated problems of nomenclature, or matters requiring the
  fixation of names in the interest of stability, are referred to the
  International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature which serves as a kind of
  taxonomic supreme court.     III.  Importance
  of Taxonomy to Biological Control   A. 
  Danks (1988) reviewed the importance of taxonomy to entomology.  Its importance for biological control was
  emphasized by Clausen (1942), and subsequently by Sabrosky (1955), Schlinger
  & Doutt (1964), Gordh (1977) and Knutson (1981).     B.  The Scientific Name.      
  1.  The scientific name of an
  organism is of utmost importance (Gordh 1977).  It provides a key to the published literature regarding any
  zoological taxon and without the correct name the researcher has no access to
  knowledge published about an animal of interest (Gordh & Beardsley
  1999).       2.  The scientific name is a kind of shorthand
  method for conveying an enormous amount of information about an organism
  which is available in published literature. 
  All the information which has been developed about any organism important
  in biological control is stored under the scientific name for that
  organism.  Because of this, the
  correctness of the name needs to be emphasized.   C.  Accurate Identification.                   1.  The need for identification is great in biological control, but
  the importance of accurate identification is greater (Gordh & Beardsley
  1999).  Two species which are very
  similar morphologically are not always similar biologically.  Subtle differences in morphology or
  biology of closely related species can be profound.  Distinguishing between variation in taxonomic characters within
  a species and difference in character states between species (individual
  versus interspecific variation) is frequently difficult.  Understanding the functional significance
  of the observed anatomical features which serve to distinguish between
  species is an area of research which has lagged behind orthodox taxonomic
  studies.  Apparent slight anatomical
  differences may reflect significant differences in the biology of two
  organisms.                  
    2.  So called minor structural differences can mean the difference
  between pest and nonpest status for species which are potential threats to
  agriculture, or between establishment and failure to establish in the case of
  natural enemies.  Some examples
  follow:                    Pink Bollworm, Pectinophora gossypiella
  (Saunders).--The gelechiid genus Pectinophora
  contains three described species:  P. scutigera, P.
  endema and P. gossypiella.  Pectinophora scutigera occurs in Australia,
  Papua New Guinea, Micronesia and Hawaii; P.
  endema is restricted to
  eastern Australia (Common 1958), while P.
  gossypiella occurs only in
  Western Australia and other world sites. 
  All species consume the flowers, seeds and seed capsules of
  Malvaceae.  Pectinophora endema
  consumes only native Hibiscus
  in Australia, and is not an agricultural pest.  The remaining species consume other Malvaceae, including Gossypium spp. (cotton).  Pectinophora
  gossypiella is one of the
  most serious cotton pests, and larvae of this species can diapause within the
  seeds of the host plant, which accounts for its widespread distribution.  By contrast, P. scutigera
  does not diapause within seeds, is limited in distribution and is not
  considered a major pest of cotton.   Holdaway (1926) gave the name of P. scutigera based on larval differences.  Later Holdaway (1929) described the
  structural characters of the adult genitalia to separate the species.  The validity of P. scutigera
  as a species was originally challenged, but is now accepted (Zimmerman 1979).   The importance of correct
  identification of the bollworms focuses on the pest status of these insects
  and quarantine enforcement.  In
  Australia P. scutigera is not a significant
  pest of cotton and its distribution is limited by intrinsic biological
  characteristics.  It does not play a
  significant role in quarantine efforts. 
  In contrast, P. gossypiella is very pestiferous
  in cotton.  It occurs in the Northern
  Territory and Western Australia but not in Queensland.  Quarantine serves as an important barrier
  restricting movement of this species. 
  Quarantine is expensive to the state and the commercial
  enterprise.                                       Coffee Mealybug, Planococcus kenyae (LePelly).--This insect
  of Kenya presents an interesting example of early failure and delayed success
  in biological control caused by misidentification of the pest species.  The pest first appeared during the 1930's
  and caused serious losses to coffee in Kenya.  First it was identified as the common, widespread, citrus
  mealybug, Planococcus citri (Risso).  Later it was determined as a related
  Philippine species, P. lilacinus (Cockerell).  Finally both of these identifications were
  shown to be incorrect, but unfortunately, on the basis of these names, a great
  amount of effort and expense was devoted to searching for and shipping
  natural enemies of Planococcus
  in the Asiatic tropics.  Parasitoids
  which appeared promising when collected could not be established in
  Kenya.  The problem was resolved when
  the taxonomist LePelley examined specimens of the pest.  He found relatively inconspicuous but
  consistent morphological differences which indicated the that coffee mealybug
  was an undescribed species, which he then named (LePelley 1935, 1943).  It was then found that this mealybug also
  occurred in Uganda and Tanzania where it was under natural biological
  control.  Parasitoids imported into
  Kenya from those areas produced complete biological control.                                     California Red Scale, Aonidiella aurantii (Maskell).--The California red scale gives an
  excellent example of the potential costs of incomplete taxonomic and
  biogeographic knowledge of a pest species. 
  This scale is a member of a complex of species native to the tropics
  and subtropics of the Old World (Africa through southeast Asia and the
  Orient) (McKenzie 1937).  It became a
  pest of citrus when introduced into the New World without its associated
  natural enemies (Compere 1961).  Many
  parasitoids associated with closely related Aonidiella species would not attack, or were not effective
  against A. aurantii.  The failure of early attempts at
  biological control were due, at least in part, to the inability to
  differentiate this species from such closely related species as A. citrina.  Some
  parasitoids in the Orient appeared promising to entomologists, but these
  species failed when introduced into California because their preferred hosts
  were other species of Aonidiella.  This was apparent after Howard McKenzie
  made a careful revision of the genus Aonidiella
  and showed that the species could be separated on the basis of microscopic
  differences.   IV.  Natural
  Enemy Identification.   A. 
  Gordh & Beardsley (1999) emphasized that of equal importance to
  accurate determination of pest species in biological control is the correct
  identification of the entomophagous organisms which are found in association
  with target pests and which are being considered for utilization in
  biological control.      
  1.  Sometimes such natural
  enemies belong to groups of small to minute insects, the species of which
  often resemble one another.  Taxonomic
  knowledge needed to differentiate species level taxa in such groups has
  accumulated slowly and with great effort. 
  In many groups knowledge remains incomplete.                                       2.  Some examples of the
  problems involving natural enemy taxa important to biological control are as
  follows:   Among the Aphelinidae, an important
  family of entomophagous Chalcidoidea, the genera Aphytis and Marietta
  appear closely related on the basis of morphology.  Superficially it is difficult to place some species in the
  correct genus.  Biologically the
  differences between the genera are profound. 
  Aphytis species are
  primary parasitoids of armored scale insects while Marietta species are hyperparasitoids, usually associated
  with armored scale insects or other Coccoidea.  Since hyperparasitoids are viewed as deleterious to biological
  control, importation or deliberate movement of Marietta could adversely affect biological control.     The family Encyrtidae, another large group
  within the Chalcidoidea, contains a vast array of genera whose species are
  primary parasitoids of phytophagous insects. 
  However the same family also contains genera whose species are mostly
  secondary parasitoids (e.g., Cheiloneurus,
  Quaylea).  Recognition of these hyperparasitoids and
  their elimination requires a taxonomic knowledge of the Encyrtidae.  Failure to do so could result in the
  introduction and establishment of undesirable species, which is thought to
  have occurred in a few cases.  A few
  genera of encyrtids (e.g., Psyllaephagus)
  contain both primary and secondary parasitoid species, which demands careful
  biological and taxonomic study to separate the beneficial primary and
  undesirable hyperparasitoids prior to releases.     In the case of the California red scale, not
  only did difficulty in distinguishing the pest from related species retard
  biological control, but this such was also encumbered by a lack of knowledge
  about a very important group of armored scale parasitoids, the genus Aphytis.  DeBach et al. (1971) showed that this lack
  of knowledge delayed achievement of biological control of California red
  scale by 50 years.  Early explorations
  for natural enemies revealed the presence of Aphytis parasitoids at several localities in the
  Orient.  Specimens from these
  collections were determined as Aphytis
  chrysomphali Mercet, a
  species already present in California which was not especially
  effective.  Therefore, no effort was
  made to propagate and release new oriental Aphytis until after World War II (Compere 1961).  The two most effective natural enemies of
  red scale, Aphytis lingnanensis Compere and A. melinus DeBach, were not recognized as distinct species
  until 1948 and 1956, respectively.  These species might have been introduced into California many
  years earlier had a proper understanding of the taxonomy of Aphytis existed (Gordh &
  Beardsley 1999).  Similarly, Aphytis holoxanthus DeBach, the most effective parasitoid of
  Florida red scale, Chrysomphalus
  aonidum (L.), apparently was
  first collected around 1900, but was ignored because it was confused with
  another species.  Aphytis holoxanthus
  was made available for biological control in 1960 when DeBach recognized it as
  a distinct species (DeBach et al. 1971).   Trichogramma is a cosmopolitan genus of tiny parasitoids
  which occur as more than 120 species. 
  All species for which the biology is known develop as primary internal
  parasitoids of eggs.  Trichogramma has been used
  extensively against lepidopterous pests in classical biological control or
  inundative release programs.  Some
  programs have produced contradictory results, with some workers claiming
  success and others admitting failure. 
  Poor taxonomic knowledge has contributed to conflicting
  assessments.  Early researchers rarely
  deposited voucher specimens for their research and without material to
  compare it was difficult or in some instances impossible to determine what
  species of Trichogramma was
  used in a release program.  In one
  example, most references to Trichogramma
  minutum Riley, T. evanescens Westwood and T. semifumatum
  (Perkins) made prior to 1980 probably are in error.  It is now known that Trichogramma
  contains many anatomically similar species which can be distinguished only by
  microscopic differences on antennae and genitalia.  Traditional reliance on body coloration is if limited utility
  and has been shown to depend on environmentally induced variation.  Many species display dark coloration at
  the base of the forewings, and the name T.
  semifumatum was often
  applied to such forms.  The latter
  species is now recognized as endemic to the Hawaiian Islands based on one
  collection (Pinto et al. 1978).     V.  Biological
  Control Contributions to Taxonomy.   A. 
  Gordh & Beardsley (1999) stated that there exists an element of
  reciprocity between the biological control worker and taxonomist which must
  be fully developed to maximize the usefulness of taxonomy as an adjunct to
  biological control.     B. 
  Biological control workers can offer taxonomists important data
  necessary to complete taxonomic identifications.  The kinds of important information include zoogeographical,
  biological, behavioral ecological and hybridizational data.      
  1.  Zoogeographical Data.--Biological
  control researchers frequently engage in time consuming and expensive foreign
  exploration.  Often the results of
  this work are not published and the imported material is not studied.  Such material can provide potentially
  important data for taxonomic studies in terms of understanding geographical
  variation and expanding known limits of distribution.                       2.  Biological Data.--Because
  it is believed that there are trends toward habitat specialization and host
  specificity in many groups of parasitic Hymenoptera, data on host range and
  host preference can be obtained in the field and in the insectary.  This information can be used by
  taxonomists to refine their taxonomic analyses f groups.  Also, information on pest species, such as
  host plant preferences, can be shared with specialists.    
  3.  Behavioral Data.--Subtle
  differences in behavior between populations of what appears to be one species
  may point to taxonomic differences between two or more closely related
  species.  Behavioral differences
  between populations cannot be easily obtained by the taxonomist who must rely
  on preserved specimens, yet they must be made aware of such differences.  Once behavioral differences are known, the
  taxonomist may find encouragement to search more for minor anatomical
  differences which can be used to distinguish between closely related taxa.   The kinds of important behavioral differences
  are many.  For example, courtship
  behavior in Aphytis appears
  to be controlled primarily by species specific sex pheromones released by
  virgin females.  Males are attracted
  to the pheromone released by conspecific females.  Also, males produce a pheromone which appears to calm the
  virgin female and render her sexually receptive.  Males and females do not normally respond to members of the
  opposite sex belonging to other, even closely related species (Rosen &
  DeBach 1979).  Additionally,  other kinds of behavior, such as host
  finding, may also be indicative of taxonomic difference between populations
  which show no readily apparent anatomical differences.                     4.  Ecological Data.--Closely related species often differ substantially
  in their ecological requirements. 
  Important data must be kept on the ecological associations of
  entomophagous arthropods collected for biological control purposes.  Factors such as elevations and season are
  important, but less apparent ecological data, such as the type of plant
  community in which the species occurs, can also provide valuable clues to the
  taxonomist who is attempting to differentiate similar forms.  Host specificity among related species of
  parasitic Hymenoptera is often reflected in their association with specific
  plants which harbor their insect hosts. 
  Thus, information on the plant hosts on which parasitoids are collected
  may prove useful to taxonomists.                      5.  Hybridization Studies.--Most classical
  taxonomists do not have access to insect rearing facilities, and as a
  consequence these taxonomists are restricted in their ability to test
  reproductive compatibility and to make judgements involving the biological
  species concepts.  While most museum
  taxonomists would acknowledge reproductive compatibility as a viable approach
  to the study of species limits, in reality they are limited to conceptual acknowledgment
  only.  Biological control researchers
  with access to laboratory and insectary facilities are able to provide
  detailed information regarding reproductive compatibility and reproductive
  isolation.  This kind of information
  is important as is illustrated in such groups as Trichogramma (Pinto et al. 1986).   VI.  Sources
  of Taxonomic Expertise   A. 
  It is often difficult to find specialists sufficiently expert in the
  taxonomy of pests and natural enemies who are willing to provide biological
  control workers with the unequivocal identifications required.  This has been especially true for groups
  of minute parasitoids that are of major importance.                        1.  Dwindling public
  support for natural history museums and for taxonomic research in general has
  intensified this problem since the 1960's. 
                        2.  Many biological
  control specialists have been required to undertake systematic research in an
  effort to solve taxonomic problems associated with their own research.  Thus, a considerable amount of basic
  research, particularly with entomophagous forms, has been conducted by
  scientists whose taxonomic interests originated with their involvement in
  applied biological control.  An
  example is the detailed study of the aphelinid genus Aphytis by Rosen & DeBach (1979).  As a result, Aphytis now is recognized as among the best understood
  genera of Hymenoptera used in biological control.  Similarly biosystematic studies by Dr. E. R. Oatman and
  colleagues have elucidated Trichogramma
  in the 1980's, and work with Muscidifurax
  by E. F. Legner has shown great diversity in a group that was previously
  regarded as monotypic.   B. 
  Directories of taxonomic specialists are published periodically (e.g.,
  Blackwelder & Blackwelder 1961), and although helpful, they are quickly
  outdated.  An effective method of
  locating taxonomic expertise is by consulting the most recent volumes of the
  Zoological Record.  Word of mouth
  approach is very effective also.                      Other
  details of specimen preparation, techniques, etc. are given in Gordh &
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