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Handbook of the Fruit Flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) of America North of Mexico by R. H. Foote, F. L. Blanc, A. L. Norrbom PDF

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Preview Handbook of the Fruit Flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) of America North of Mexico by R. H. Foote, F. L. Blanc, A. L. Norrbom

280 JOURNALOFTHE NEW YORKENTOMOLOGICALSOCIETY Vol. 102(2) tion ofthe twenty-nine known species (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Aust. J. Zool. 27: 773-788. Taylor, R. W. 1990. New Asian ants of the tribe Basicerotini, with an on-line computer interactive key to the twenty-six known Indo-Australian species (Hymenoptera: For- micidae: Myrmicinae). Invert. Taxon. 4:397-425. J. New YorkEntomol. Soc. 102(2):280-283, 1994 Handbook ofthe Fruit Flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) ofAmerica North ofMexico.— R.H.Foote,F.L.BlancandA. L.Norrbom. 1993.ComstockPublishingAssociates (a division ofCornell University Press), Ithaca, xii + 571 pp. US $115.50 cloth. In the field ofagriculture, the true fruit flies (Tephritidae orTrypetidae) are by far the most written about and researched group ofDiptera, with citations far in excess ofthe other major phytophagous groups, namely the Cecidomyiidae and Agromy- zidae. Most ofthat interest is confined to the major fruit pest genera Anastrepha, Bactrocera, Ceratitis, Dacus and Rhagoletis, all ofwhich have been found in North Americaatsometime,eveniftheyarefortunatelynotallestablishedthere. However, most temperate members ofthe family are not associated with fruit, but with the flowers, or sometimes leaves, stems or roots, ofAsteraceae (=Compositae). Most of the 300 species and 56 genera known in North America are Asteraceae-associated, and some of those are actually European species deliberately introduced to help controlEuropeanplantsthat havebeenaccidentallyintroducedintoNorth America. The application ofthese flies to weed biological control has been possible because most ofthe Asteraceae-associated tephritids have a remarkably narrow host range, inmanycasesattackingonlyafewplantsbelongingtoasinglespeciesgroup,subgenus or genus. Complex behavioral patterns in mate recognition and the use ofthe host plant as a mating rendezvous site have no doubt facilitated the evolution ofmany closely related species each with differing ranges ofhosts. However, the family Te- phritidae has been remarkably neglected by the major workers in plant-insect rela- tionships, and most of our knowledge of the biology ofthe Asteraceae-associated species comes from the work ofpresent or former biocontrol specialists. Thismonumentalwork,whichdeservesamoreprestigioustitlethanmerelyHand- book, keys and describes all ofthe 300 species known from the Americas north of Mexico.Itwillthereforeenableidentificationoftheknownpestandbeneficialspecies, and hopefullyencouragefurtherworkinvolvingthese flies inthe fieldofplant-insect relationships. Forthe first two authorsthisbook representsa synthesisofexperience gained duringentire career spans, supplementedbyrecent studies carried out by the third author, notably on the genus Anastrepha. The book starts with an introductionwhich includes a mention ofspecies ofsome biocontrol agent tephritids that were introduced too late for full inclusion in the work. There follows an excellent account ofthe adult morphology oftephritid fruit flies which is both well illustrated and applies the standardized terms first detailed in the ManualofNearctic Diptera (J. F. McAlpine, ed., 1981). Even so, there is still 1994 BOOKREVIEWS 281 someconfusion overthe applicationofthese terms as the authorsuse the term post- alar for what I have called posterior supra-alar; and others have used post-alar for whattheauthors(andmyself)havecalledtheintra-alar. Somuchforstandardization! The next section, coveringbiology, isverybrief, butexcusably sowith so manyfruit fly symposium volumes and multi-author works covering every worked aspect of tephritidbiology, to referto. The authors then presenta review ofthe classifications ofthe family, including the first ever tabulation showing how the North American generafitintotheclassification. Thissectionisofimportancetofruitflytaxonomists in all world regions as it is the first detailed account ofthe work that A1 Norrbom has been coordinating for the last few years to try to produce a sensible globally applicable classification ofthe family; no mean task in a family ofjust 4,000 species divided among a colossal 500 genera. The following section is also worldwide in coverageasitreviewsthemajortaxonomicliteraturefromeachzoogeographicregion. Thenextchapter, TechniquesforStudy, isanexcellentaccount ofhowto mountand dissect specimens, but details ofcollecting and rearing techniques are sadly lacking. The final introductory section is entitled About this Handbook, and it explains the scope ofthekeys and speciesaccounts. This sectionalso listsnomenclaturalchanges madeintheHandbook, andthisisaparticularlygoodideaasIalwaysfearZoological Recordabstractors could miss changes made within a substantial text ofthis sort. The first key is to genera, as the authors very wisely make no attempt to present a key to subfamilies and tribes. This, and otherkeys are very clearly illustrated with figuresclosetothetextfromwhich theyarereferenced, andwitha systemoflettered arrowstoimportantfeatures. AlthoughIfounditfairlyobviouswhatthesignificance ofthe indicated features were in almost all cases, some readers may wish they had been explained in the figure legends as well as in the keys. In the Systematic Treatment ofthe Genera, the generaand species are arranged in alphabeticalorder.ThemaingeneracoveredthatincludepestspeciesareAnastrepha, Bactrocera, Ceratitis, DacusandRhagoletis. Thekeyto 19Anastrephaspp., includes the West Indianfruit fly (A.obliqua (Macquart)), Sapote fruit fly (A. serpentina(Wie- demann)) and Guava fruit fly (A. striata Schiner), all ofwhich have distributions which abut the southern borders ofthe USA and represent a considerable threat to the US fruit industry. The account ofRhagoletis spp. is also likely to be well used as this includes the most important temperate fruit pests in North America, e.g. the astpupdlieesmaogfgsoptecfilyat(Rio.npoprmoocneeslselsa.(MWaalnshy))R,hawghoilcehtihsasspapl.soarbeeeanlstoheofsumbajjeoctropfleaxntteqnusairv-e antine importance to Europe, and in recent years two North American species have regularly been trapped in Switzerland. Regrettably, the account of the Bactrocera spp. that have been intercepted or trapped in the USA could have been improved by review at the manuscript stage. NoBactroceraspp.arenativetotheNewWorld,althoughthemelonfly(B. cucurbitae (Coquillett)),Orientalfruitfly{B. dorsalis(Hendel))andsolanumfruitfly(B. latifrons (Hendel)) are all established in Hawaii, and a close relative ofOriental fruit fly is also established in Suriname. All ofthese species, plus the Queensland fruit fly {B. tryoni(Froggatt))andtwo otherAsian species, havebeeninterceptedorbait-trapped in California. Fortunately none ofthese species have become established, but as it is important that good information on their recognition is made available, some amendmentstothekey are suggestedhere. Couplet 1 couldhave mentionedthatthe 282 JOURNALOFTHENEWYORKENTOMOLOGICALSOCIETY Yol. 102(2) melon fly is also separated from the other five species by having three, rather than two, stripes on the scutum. The Queensland fruit fly separates from the others by having its costal band start from the base ofthe wing rather than from cell sc, and then the solanum fruit fly can be separated from the Oriental fruit fly, by its yellow anepistemal stripebeingtriangularandcontactingthe yellowmarkon the postpron- otal lobe. Unfortunately, some ofthe wing photographs for this genus were based on teneral specimens, so the apical expansion ofthe costal band ofthe solanum fruit fly is not shown clearly. The authors have also chosen to perpetratethe USDAhabit of calling this widespread Asian species Malaysian fruit fly, despite the fact that MalaysianagriculturalentomologistsvoicedobjectionstothisatameetingIattended in Kuala Lumpur in the company ofone ofthe authors! Naturally the Malaysians do not wantto riskbeing singled out forfruit export bans thatare equallyapplicable to neighboring countries. The genera ofparticular importance for their inclusion ofweed biocontrol agents ofuse in North America are Chaetorellia, Tephritis, Terellia and Urophora. All of the Urophora spp. ofinterest are included, although some ofthe distribution maps should show more Canadian records. Unfortunately the genera Chaetorellia and Terellia, bothofwhich includespeciesabouttobereleased, orinsomecasesactually established in North America to help control some weedy Centaurea spp., are only mentioned in the introduction and are not described. The remaining 49 genera lack species ofnotable economic importance, but none- thelessincludearangeofinteresting,andinmanycasesverybeautifullookinginsects. Flies are generally underrated aesthetically, but having collectedgenera such asAci- urina, Gymnocarena, Paracantha and Strauzia, I can vouch for that fact that when alive, many ofthese North American flies have brilliant green and brown patterns across their eyes, which sparkle like jewels. A characteristic feature of the family Tephritidae is that most species have ornately patterned wings, and curiously, I suspect this has hindered proper understanding ofspecies limits, as there has been a tendency to divide species on often trivial characters ofwing pattern. While col- lecting in British Columbia I reared some specimens ofa Tephritis sp. from flowers ofan Erigeron sp. I also swept huge numbers ofwhat I took to be a separate and consistently rathersmaller species from areas where therewasnoErigeron. Samples ofboth ofthese flies were sent to the authors ofthis Handbookforexamination and both were identified as T. araneosa (Coquillett). Knowing the mess our European Tephritis fauna used be in as a result ofthe over-reliance on wing pattern, I remain skeptical ofthe conspecificity ofthose two populations. Consequently, I was very pleased that the authors mention in the introduction to the Tephritis section that “the results offuture biological studies may alter our concepts at the special level,” and that they also make special reference to problems associated with the concept ofT. araneosa. This excellent book will I hope spur North American entomologists on to make thosebiological studies, althoughthelackofasummaryofexistinghostdataappears at first sight to be a major omission. North America is the only region for which an extensive tephritid host catalogue has been published and the lack ofa host list in the Handbook is therefore excusable. However, some ofthe host records that are quoted should have been subject to some scrutiny. For example, I find it very hard 1994 BOOKREVIEWS 283 to believe the record ofT. araneosa from the grass Poa, since all confirmed rearings ofTephritis spp. have been from the Asteraceae. It is regrettable that this book has clearly taken a long time between manuscript completion and publication. For example, a 1985 revision of Orellia and Terellia spp. apparently came too late to be applied to the arrangement ofthis 1993 publi- cation. Similarly, recent revisions ofEpochra andParoxyna spp. could not be taken into account and I could find no mention ofthe recent outbreak ofMediterranean fruitfly(Ceratitiscapitata(Wiedemann))inCalifornia.Clearly,thisdelaywouldhave beenlargelythefaultofthepublishersratherthantheauthors.Anotherfeaturewhich may be attributable to the publisher is that the illustrations are a little under-sized, although thatis compensated forbytheirclarityand undoubtedgoodquality. How- ever,thedistributionmapsarenotunder-sizedandgiveaveryclearvisualindication ofthe range ofevery species, although no distinction is made between established distribution and areas from which pest species have been eradicated. Bearing in mind the diverse reasons for which the family Tephritidae is studied, this book should be ofvalue in the field ofplant quarantine and weed biocontrol, and it will be a major contribution to the study ofNorth American Diptera, and in a wider context the taxonomy ofTephritidae. As I have already indicated, there is considerable scope for discovery in combining work on plant-insect relationships with the taxonomy ofthese delightful flies. Few works in taxonomy can rightfully claim such a wide potential audience.—Ian M. White, International Institute of Entomology, 56 Queen’s Gate, London SW7 5JR, U.K. J. New YorkEntomol. Soc. 102(2):283—285, 1994 Insect Pathology.—Y. Tanada and H. K. Kaya. 1993. Academic Press, San Diego. 666 pp. $129.00. That diseases can decimate insect populations has long been recognized, yet this subdisciplineofentomologyhasreceivedrelativelylittleattentionuntilfairlyrecently. Effective biological control is in great demand; in systems where predators and parasitoidsprovideinadequatepestcontrol,disease-causingorganismsarenowbeing evaluatedandintegratedintopestmanagement. Infact, several microorganismsand nematodes are presently commercially available and quite a few more are in the registration process or are being developed for mass production. However, these developments demonstrate only the most readily foreseen applications of insect pathology.Researchwithinsectpathogenshasyieldedmajoradvancesinentomology in the application ofmolecularbiological methodology. Forexample, baculoviruses have been engineered to produce drugs for humans and crop plant varieties are protected by expression ofthe Bacillus thuringiensis delta-endotoxin gene. Studies ofdisease-causing organisms increase the basic knowledge in microbiology, proto- zoology, mycology, virology, and nematology as well as insect immunology. Appli- cation ofcomputer models to patterns ofdisease abundance builds on generalized epidemiologicaltheoriestowarddevelopingtheabilitytopredictdiseaseprevalence.

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