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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The Mediterranean flour moth, Ephestia kuehniella Zeller, is a serious
cosmopolitan pest for cereal mills and wherever flour is stored, and in the Azores
it is used to rear parasites and predators that are used in biological control
(Trichogrammatidae, Coccinellídae, Chrysopidae). In order to leam the effect of
mass rearing conditions on the reproduction of E. kuehniella, four groups of adult
moths were studied: (i) isolated couples which were allowed to mate freely during
all adult life, and which were not fed; (ii) isolated couples which mated freely and
were fed with honey; (iii) couples that mated once and were not fed; (iv) virgins
and were not fed. Differences between groups regarding weight, longevity, copulating
behaviour, fecundity, fertility and number of spermatophores were evaluated. Females were heavier than males. Males and virgin females lived significantly longer than mated females. The oviposition was mainly concentrated in the first three days of the females lifetime (70-90% laying eggs). A high percentage (88%) of copulations occured within five hours before dawn. No significant differences were found in fecundiry and fertiliry parameters between females coupling once and those mating freely during lifetime, nor between those fed with or without honey. Virgin females laid lower numbers of eggs than mated females.
Description
Keywords
Biological Control Ephestia kuehniella Zeller Mass Rearing Conditions
Pedagogical Context
Citation
FALP, L., V. VIEIRA & J. TAVARES, (1995). Some reproduction aspects of Ephestia kuehniella Zeller (Lepidoptera, Pyralidae) under mass rearing conditions. "Avances en Entomología Ibérica" (ed. Comité editorial). Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC) y Universidad Autónoma de Madrid: 367-374.
Publisher
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales
