Xylosandrus compactus

Xylosandrus compactus is a species of ambrosia beetle. Common names for this beetle include black twig borer, black coffee borer, black coffee twig borer and tea stem borer. The adult beetle is dark brown or black and inconspicuous; it bores into a twig of a host plant and lays its eggs, and the larvae create further tunnels through the plant tissues. These beetles are agricultural pests that damage the shoots of such crops as coffee, tea, cocoa and avocado.

Xylosandrus compactus
An adult Xylosandrus compactus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Infraorder: Cucujiformia
Family: Curculionidae
Genus: Xylosandrus
Species:
X. compactus
Binomial name
Xylosandrus compactus
(Eichhoff, 1875)
Synonyms[1]
  • Xyleborus compactus
  • Xyleborus morstatti

Description

This beetle is dark brown or black. The adult female is up to 2 mm (0.08 in) long and about half as wide. The head is convex at the front with an indistinct transverse groove above the mouthparts. Each antenna consists of a funicle (base) with five segments and an obliquely truncated club slightly longer than it is wide. The pronotum is rounded with six or eight serrations on the front edge. The elytra are convex and grooved and have fine perforations, and there are bristles between the grooves. The adult male is a smaller insect, has an unserrated pronotum and no wings.[1]

The eggs are smooth, white and ovoid, about 0.5 mm (0.02 in) long. The larvae are creamy white with brownish heads and have no legs. The pupae are cream-coloured and exarate (with free appendages).[1]

Distribution

Xylosandrus compactus has a wide distribution in the tropics. Its range extends from Madagascar and much of tropical Africa, through Sri Lanka and southern India, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, China and Japan to Indonesia, New Guinea and various islands in the Pacific.[2] It was introduced into the continental United States in 1941 and has also spread to Brazil and Cuba.[3] It arrived in Hawaii in 1961, and here it infests over one hundred species of timber trees, fruit trees, ornamental trees and fruit bushes.[4] Its presence in Hawaii is putting some rare and threatened endemic trees such as Alectryon macrococcus,[5] Colubrina oppositifolia, Caesalpinia kavaiensis, and Flueggea neowawraea, at risk.[6]

Hosts

Some 225 species of plants in 62 families have been recorded as acting as hosts for this beetle. In a natural broad-leafed forest it does not normally cause much damage, but when it infects plantations of susceptible host plants it may become a pest. Major crops where it does serious damage are coffee,[7] tea, avocado and cocoa.[1] In India it attacks Khaya grandifoliola and Khaya senegalensis, which are grown as shade trees in plantations, and similarly in Africa it attacks Erythrina sp. and Melia azedarach. It is particularly damaging in tree nurseries, killing seedlings and young saplings.[1] A study in Uganda's shaded robusta coffee systems, tree species suppressing X. compactus infestation characteristically exuded copious sap regardless of any stress. Therefore, the presence or absence of copious sap exuding from trees upon injury likely differentiates X. compactus hosts from non-hosts.[7]

Ecology

In Florida, where X. compactus has been introduced, the life cycle is completed in about twenty-eight days. Like other ambrosia beetles, the adult female carries fungal symbionts, particularly Ambrosiella xylebori and Fusarium species.[8] These fungi colonize the xylem tissue of the plant host, and are consumed by the adult beetles and larvae.[9] Male larvae are produced from unfertilised eggs and are few in number; they remain in the gallery and eventually mate with their sisters.[4] After pupation, the newly emerged female beetles remain in the tunnels for about eight days, and mating takes place here. They then crawl out of the tunnels and fly to another host tree, carrying some of the fungus with them. Here they tunnel into sound wood on the underside of the branch, introduce the fungus and start laying eggs. The females live for about forty days; symptoms of the infestation of a twig include the death of the stem and leaves beyond the tunnel entrance.[3][4]

References

  1. "Xylosandrus compactus (shot-hole borer)". Invasive Species Compendium. CABI. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  2. Waller, J.M.; Bigger, M.; Hillocks, R.J. (2007). Coffee Pests, Diseases and Their Management. CABI. pp. 58–59. ISBN 978-1-84593-209-1.
  3. "Black twig borer". Featured Creatures. University of Florida. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  4. Hara, A.H.; Beardsley, J.W. Jr. (1976). "The biology of the black twig borer, Xylosandrus compactus (Eichhoff), in Hawaii". Proceedings of the Hawaiian Entomological Society. 23 (1): 55–70. ISSN 0073-134X.
  5. "Comprehensive Report Species – Alectryon macrococcus". The Nature Conservancy. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  6. World Conservation Monitoring Centre (1998). "Flueggea neowawraea ". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016.2. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  7. Bukomeko, Hannington; Jassogne, Laurence; Kagezi, Godfrey H.; Mukasa, David; Vaast, Philippe (2017). "Influence of shaded systems on Xylosandrus compactus infestation in Robusta coffee along a rainfall gradient in Uganda". Agricultural and Forest Entomology. 20 (3): 327–333. doi:10.1111/afe.12265.
  8. Bateman, Craig; Sigut, Martin; Skelton, James; Smith, Katherine; Hulcr, Jiri (2016). "Fungal associates of the Xylosandrus compactus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae) are spatially segregated on the insect body" (PDF). Environmental Entomology. 45 (4): 883–90. doi:10.1093/ee/nvw070. PMID 27357160. S2CID 38762195. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  9. "Sociality in ambrosia beetles". Division Behavioural Ecology, University of Bern. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
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