Diversity of stem borer parasitoids and their associated wild host plants in South Africa and Mozambique
Date
2013Author
Moolman, H.J.
Van den Berg, J.
Siebert, S.J.
Conlong, D.
Cugala, D.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The diversity of lepidopterous stem borers,
their parasitoids and their associated wild host plants
was studied in South Africa between 2006 and 2009 and
in Mozambique between 2005 and 2010. In South
Africa, 20 species of parasitoids were recovered from
17 stem borer species collected on 16 wild host plant
species. From Mozambique, 14 parasitoid species were
recorded from 16 stem borer species collected on 14
wild host plant species. The highest diversity of parasitoids
was recorded on stem borers that attacked the
host plants Phragmites australis (7 spp.) and Panicum
maximum (6 spp.), in South Africa and Mozambique,
respectively. Bracon sp. (Hymenoptera: Braconidae)
and Procerochasmias nigromaculatus (Hymenoptera:
Ichneumonidae) were the most recorded parasitoid species
in South Africa while Cotesia sesamiae
(Hymenoptera: Braconidae) parasitized most stem borer
species in Mozambique. The most common tachinid
parasitoid recorded in this study was Sturmiopsis parasitica
(Diptera: Tachinidae). Parasitism of stem borers
during the off season was previously thought to occur
mainly in natural habitats but this study shows that
although natural habitats provided refuges for some
parasitoid species, stem borer parasitism was generally
low in wild host plants, irrespective of whether collections
were done during the cropping or off-season.
Parasitoid beta diversity did not depend on habitat or
host plant species, but was determined by stem borer
diversity