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Biology and host range of the stem-boring beetle Aphanasium australe, a promising agent for the biological control of Hakea sericea in South Africa

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Abstract

The invasive Australian shrubHakea sericea Shrader is a majorenvironmental weed in the Western and EasternCape Provinces of South Africa. Dense,impenetrable thickets severely threaten theunique endemic vegetation of the Cape FloristicKingdom, increase fire hazards and reduce wateryields in catchments. Biological control,initiated in the 1970s, is largely confined tothe use of seed-feeding insect agents. Becausenone of these agents reduce the density ofexisting hakea populations, a stem-boringbeetle, Aphanasium australe (Boisduval) (Cerambycidae),was imported into quarantine in South Africa in1975. During multichoice oviposition tests,involving 12 Australian and six South Africanproteaceous species, in a walk-in cage, A. australe only oviposited on four species ofHakea and two exotic species of Grevillea. However, culturing difficultiesresulted in the suspension of host-specificitytesting after three years. Testing was resumedfollowing re-importations in 1995, also becauseA. australe also attacks Hakeagibbosa (Sm.) Cav., which is not attacked byany of the existing biocontrol agents. Duringno-choice survival tests, involving 66test plant species from 15 families, A. australe only developed on H. sericea, H. gibbosa and one exoticspecies of Grevillea. The contention thatA. australe is confined to the genus Hakea was confirmed by host records andsurveys in Australia which provided no evidenceof attacks on crop, pasture or related plants.The regulatory authorities accepted theseresults and A. australe was cleared forrelease in South Africa during 2001.

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Gordon, A. Biology and host range of the stem-boring beetle Aphanasium australe, a promising agent for the biological control of Hakea sericea in South Africa. BioControl 48, 113–122 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021245017334

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021245017334

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