| File:
  <elaterid.htm>                                                 [For educational
  purposes only]        Glossary            <Principal Natural Enemy Groups>             <Citations>             <Home> | 
 
| COLEOPTERA, Elateridae  --  <Images> & <Juveniles>   Please refer also to the following
  link for details on this group:    Elateridae = Link 1 Description             The family is largely phytophagous, and the larvae of
  most species are major crop pests. 
  However, a considerable number of genera have species that are predaceous
  on insects rather than being phytophagous. 
  Because the larvae are largely soil inhabiting, they feed on such
  other soft-bodied insects as they find. 
  Thus, scarabaeid grubs are among the most frequent prey.  Monocrepidius
  pallipes Esch. is an important
  natural enemy of white grubs in Fiji and has not been found to attack
  sugarcane, while M. exsul Sharp preys on grubs but also is
  destructive to young sugarcane in the pacific Islands (Williams 1931).  Pyrophorus
  luminosus Ill. is the
  "cucubano" of the West Indies, which serves as a natural control of
  various cane grubs of the family Scarabaeidae.  It has been imported to several tropical areas for biological
  control of scarabs.  Several species
  occur in decaying wood where they prey on larvae of different xylophagous
  insects (Clausen 1940/62).             Most species are are
  small and dull colored, with a few exceptions. Adults are usually nocturnal
  and phytophagous, and of little economic importance. Howver,  they may enter structures and cause damage
  to wood products. The larvae, known as wireworms, are saprophagous, but some
  species are also agricultural pests. 
  There are some predators of other insect larvae. There are also
  bioluminescent species; e.g.,, Pyrophorus.             The larvae are elongated,
  cylindrical or flattened, and possess a thick integument.  Some species complete development in one
  year but most spend 3-4 years in the soil, where they feed on decaying
  vegetation and the roots of plants, and often cause damage to a variety
  of  agricultural crops. Elaterids are
  able to quickly locate food by following carbon dioxide gradients from plant
  material in the soil, and they are able to recover from the effects of
  pesticides. Thus, it is often difficult to reduce a problematic field infestation.             Larvae of some South
  American species inhabit burrows in termite mounds where they utilize
  bioluminescence to attract flying prey.   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Doane, J. F., Y. W. Lee, N. D. Westcott & J.
  Klingler.  1975. "The orientation response of Ctenicera
  destructor and other wireworms (Coleoptera: Elateridae) to germinating
  grain and to carbon dioxide". Canadian Entomologist 107 (12):
  1233–1252.   Majka, C. G. & Paul J. Johnson.  2008. "The Elateridae (Coleoptera) of
  the Maritime Provinces of Canada: faunal composition, new records, and
  taxonomic changes" (PDF excerpt). Zootaxa 1811: 1–33.   Parker, W. E. 
  & Julia J. Howard.  2001.
  "The biology and management of wireworms (Agriotes spp.) on
  potato with particular reference to the U.K.". Agricultural and Forest
  Entomology 3 (2): 85–98.   Schneider, M. C., M. C. Almeida, SPolicena Rosa, C.
  Costa & D. Maria Cella.  2006. "Evolutionary chromosomal
  differentiation among four species of Conoderus Eschscholtz, 1829
  (Coleoptera, Elateridae, Agrypninae, Conoderini) detected by standart
  staining, C-banding, silver nitrate impregnation, and CMA3/DA/DAPI
  staining". Genetica 128 (1–3): 333–346.   Van Herk, W. G. & Robert S. Vernon.  2007. "Soil bioassay for studying
  behavioral responses of wireworms (Coleoptera: Elateridae) to
  inecticide-treated wheat seed". Environmental Entomology 36 (6): 1441–1449.    Van Herk, W. G., R. S. Vernon, J. H. Tolman & H.
  Ortiz Saavedra.  2008. "Mortality of a wireworm, Agriotes
  obscurus (Coleoptera: Elateridae), after topical application of various
  insecticides". Journal of Economic Entomology 101 (2): 375–383.   Vernon, R. S., 
  W. Van Herk, J. Tolman, H. Ortiz Saavedra, M. Clodius & B.
  Gage.  2008. "Transitional sublethal
  and lethal effects of insecticides after dermal exposures to five economic
  species of wireworms (Coleoptera: Elateridae)". Journal of Economic
  Entomology 101 (2): 365–374.   |