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HOST FOLIAGE IN THE SUSCEPTIBILITY OF FOREST SITES IN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA TO OUTBREAKS OF THE DOUGLAS-FIR TUSSOCK MOTH, ORGYIA PSEUDOTSUGATA (LEPIDOPTERA: LYMANTRIIDAE)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

R. R. Mason
Affiliation:
Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Corvallis, Oregon 97331

Abstract

Host foliage was evaluated for nonpreference and antibiosis by field rearing Douglas-fir tussock moth larvae, Orgyia pseudotsugata (McDunnough), (instars 2–6) at typical outbreak and non-outbreak forest sites in central California. Nonpreference was evaluated by comparing frass production and antibiosis by comparing survival, pupation, and fecundity on the different sites. Typical outbreak sites had a lower site index and higher plant moisture stress than typical non-outbreak sites. Production of frass for all crown levels collectively was not significantly different between sites, although more frass was produced in the tops of trees on outbreak sites. Survival and pupation were also not significantly different between sites, but egg production was 28% higher on outbreak sites than non-outbreak sites. If differences in foliage quality did exist between sites, they did not affect the tussock moth enough to explain observed differences in population numbers.

Résumé

Des larves des stades 2 à 6 de la chenille à houppes du Douglas, Orgyia pseudotsugata (McDunnough), ont été élevées sur le terrain afin d’évaluer la non-préférence et l’antibiose du feuillage de l’hôte. Les observations ont été faites au centre de la Californie dans des sites forestiers qui sont généralement soit épidémiques, soit non-épidémiques. La non-préférence et l’antibiose ont été évaluées en comparant, respectivement, la production de matière fécale, et la survie, le taux de nymphose et la fécondité, entre les différents sites. Les sites généralement épidémiques ont montré un indice de site plus bas, et un niveau de privation d’humidité des arbres plus élevé que les sites typiquement non-épidémiques. La production de matière fécale pour l’ensemble des différents niveaux de l’arbre n’a pas montré de différence significative liée au site, bien que plus de matière fécale ait été produite au sommet des arbres dans les sites épidémiques. La survie et le taux de nymphose n’ont pas varié significativement entre les sites, mais la ponte était de 28% plus élevée dans les sites épidémiques que dans les sites non-épidémiques. S’il existait des différences qualitatives du feuillage entre les sites, elles n’ont pas affecté la chenille à houppes suffisamment pour expliquer les différences observées dans l’abondance des populations.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1981

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