Author/Authors :
Quentin Paynter، نويسنده , , Nicholas Martin، نويسنده , , Jo Berry، نويسنده , , Shane Hona، نويسنده , , Paul Peterson، نويسنده , , A. Hugh Gourlay، نويسنده , , Julia Wilson-Davey، نويسنده , , Lindsay Smith، نويسنده , , Chris Winks، نويسنده , , Simon V. Fowler، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The agromyzid leaf-mining fly Phytomyza vitalbae, which was introduced into New Zealand as a biological control agent of the invasive deciduous European vine Clematis vitalba L. (old man’s beard; Ranunculaceae) in 1996, was recorded attacking native non-target Clematis forsteri and Clematis foetida in New Zealand, with C. foetida being most commonly attacked. Both the incidence and levels of P. vitalbae attack were significantly lower on the non-target species, compared to on the target plant and populations of non-target plants that were growing within 4 km of the nearest known patch of C. vitalba were most commonly attacked. No-choice starvation tests indicated that survival of P. vitalbae was low and oviposition did not occur on C. foetida unless flies had previously fed on C. vitalba until they began ovipositing, indicating that non-target attack was a “spillover” effect that is unlikely to have a major detrimental impact on the non-target plants.
Keywords :
biological control of weeds , Non-target attack , Apparent competition , Clematis vitalba , Phytomyza vitalbae