INVESTIGADORES
SOSA alejandro JoaquÍn
artículos
Título:
Feeding behavior and spatial distribution of two planthoppers, Megamelus scutellaris (Delphacidae) and Taosa longula (Dictyopharidae), on water hyacinth
Autor/es:
M.C.HERNÁNDEZ; MARIA EUGENIA BRENTASSI; A.J. SOSA; J. SACCO; GERARDO ELSESSER
Revista:
BIOCONTROL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Editorial:
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2011 vol. 21 p. 941 - 952
ISSN:
0958-3157
Resumen:
Megamelus scutellaris Berg (Delphacidae) and Taosa (Cuernavaca) longula Remes Lenicov (Dictyopharidae) are specialist planthoppers that feed and reproduce on the invasive aquatic weed, Eichhornia crassipes (Martius) Solms-Laubach (Pontederiaceae). They overlap geographically in several regions of South America and may, therefore, interact and compete for food and microhabitat. Preliminary observations indicated that both species do not feed on the same part of the plant. We hypothesized that they partition the resource; hence, we studied (1) the feeding mechanism at the tissue level and (2) the spatial distribution of both species on the water hyacinth plant. Salivary sheaths were detected through histological sections of plant tissues using light microscopy. The location of eitherplanthopper species on the plant was recorded when in the presence or absence of the other species. Both species produced true salivary sheaths, mostly branched (M. scutellaris: 82%; T. longula: 84%), ending in phloem (M. scutellaris: 56%; T. longula: 52%), and xylem tissues (M. scutellaris: 24%; T. longula: 28%). They resided on different parts of the water hyacinth plant even when they did not coexist; nymphs of T. longula occurred primarily on the back side of the leaf laminas, while nymphs of M. scutellaris occupied the basal zone of the petioles. This study shows that these planthoppers complement each other and could beused in combination as control agents for water hyacinth. Further experimental studies and field observations are necessary to quantify interactions.