FILE:  <ch-19.htm>                                                                                                                                   
GENERAL INDEX    {also please see <bc-37.htm>]                 [Navigate to   MAIN MENU ]
 
| CHIRONOMID MIDGES   Chironomus spp. -- Diptera, Chironomidae   (Contacts)     ------ CLICK on Photo to enlarge & search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                  GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases   
          Research on the
  biological control of Chironomidae has been in conjunction with mosquito
  control, because the breeding habitats are often the same or similar.  The same natural enemy groups were
  investigated, which includes fish, hydra, planaria and various aquatic insect
  predators.  As with mosquitoes, fish
  have given the most significant levels of control, with cichlids of the
  genera Tilapia and Oreochromis being most
  important.  A permanent classical
  biological control has been achieved in the principal storm drain channels of
  Los Angeles with the establishment of Oreochromis
  mossambica (Peters) and Oreochromis.
  hornorum Trewazas there. <PHOTO>.  Persistence of these subtropical cichlids
  is facilitated by areas of warm water effluent that is discharged into the storm
  channels from electrical power plants in winter.          Benthic species of
  Chironomidae are grazed to control levels in these channels, and the cichlid
  populations annually reach very dense populations, which by early autumn show
  signs of starvation.  Pelagic
  Chironomidae have increased in abundance with reduced competition for food in
  the absence of benthic forms. 
  Fortuitously, pelagic species pose no public nuisance.  Research revealed that densities of
  principally Chironomus decorus Johannsen larvae,
  declined markedly in detritus habitats of the urban drainages of the Los
  Angeles basin, with the establishment of the cichlids.  However, density changes in another group
  of non-annoying midges, Cricotopus
  and Tanypus species, were
  not pronounced over a 9-yr study period. 
  The effective foraging on Chironomidae in certain substrates by very dense populations of the species of cichlids influences the phenotypic
  characteristics of such substrates to produce chironomids.  Typically the insect-produced fish biomass
  in autumn can exceed 4 x 105 kg over a distance of 18 km of paved
  river channel, a phenomenon apparently dependent indirectly on the
  availability of warm water effluent from a power generating plant.  The cichlids now range in the neritic zone
  along the southwestern California coast, and their contribution to enhancing
  predatory marine fish biomass may be significant.          A native species of
  pupfish, Cyprinodon macularius
  Baird & Girard, has also been shown to be an effective predator of chironomid
  midges.  This species might be
  superior to Gambusia for
  mosquito abatement as well, being able to rely on other than mosquito food in
  periods of low mosquito abundance (Walters & Legner 1980).                   Details of
  biological control efforts against Chironomidae may be found in the
  references cited at the end of this section.                         [ Please refer also to Related Research ]     REFERENCES:          [Additional references may be
  found at:    MELVYL
  Library ]   Legner, E. F.  1973.  Book Review,
  "Biologische Schädlingsbekämpfung." by J. M. Franz.  Paul Parey-Verlag, Berlin.  298 pp., 16 fig.  Bull. Entomol.
  Soc. Amer. 19(2):  126.   Legner, E. F.  1983e.  Imported cichlid behaviour in
  California.  Proc. Intern. Symp. on Tilapia in aquaculture,
  Nazareth, Israel, 8-13 May, 1983.  Tel Aviv
  Univ. Publ. 59-63.   261.   Legner, E. F.  1995. 
  Biological control of Diptera of medical and veterinary
  importance.  J. Vector Ecology 20(1):
  59-120.   Legner, E. F. & E. C. Bay. 
  1970a.  The introduction of natural
  enemies in California for the biological control of noxious flies and
  gnats.  Proc. Calif. Mosq. Contr.
  Assoc., Inc. 37:  126-129.   Legner, E. F. & R. A. Medved.  1972.  Predators
  investigated for the biological control of mosquitoes and midges at the
  University of California, Riverside. 
  Proc. Calif. Mosq. Contr. Assoc., Inc. 40:  109-111.   Legner, E. F. & R. A. Medved.  1973b.  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(3):  354-364.   Legner, E. F. & R. A. Medved.  1974b.  The native desert
  pupfish, Cyprinodon macularius Baird and Girard, a
  substitute for Gambusia
  in  mosquito control?  Proc. Calif. Mosq. Contr. Assoc., Inc.
  42:  58-59.   Legner, E. F. & F. W. Pelsue.  1977.  Adaptations of Tilapia to Culex and chironomid midge ecosystems in south
  California.  Proc. Calif. Mosq. &
  Vect. Contr. Assoc., Inc. 45:  95-97.   Legner, E. F. & F. W. Pelsue, Jr.  1983.  Contemporary
  appraisal of the population dynamics of introduced cichlid fish in south
  California.  Proc. Calif. Mosq. &
  Vect. Contr. Assoc., Inc. 51:  38-39.   Legner, E. F., R. A. Medved & W. J.
  Hauser.  1975b. 
  Predation by the desert pupfish, Cyprinodon
  macularius on Culex mosquitoes and benthic
  chironomid midges.  Entomophaga
  20(1):  23-30.   Legner, E. F., R. A. Medved & F. Pelsue.  1980b. 
  Changes in chironomid breeding patterns in a paved river channel
  following adaptation of cichlids of the Tilapia
  mossambica-hornorum complex.  Ann. Entomol. Soc. Amer. 73(1):  293-299.   Walters, L. L. & E. F. Legner.  1980.  Impact of the
  desert pupfish, Cyprinodon macularius, and Gambusia affinis on fauna in pond ecosystems. Hilgardia 48(3):  1-18.   |