Showing posts with label vine weevil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vine weevil. Show all posts
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Thanatosis
Thursday's Guardian Country Diary is about thanatosis - the strange behaviour of some animals that pretend to be dead when they are threatened. It's also known as 'playing possum', because its most famous exponent is the Virginia opossum, but many other animals do it, from grass snakes to tiny insects like this vine weevil that I found amongst primroses in a wood in Teesdale.
Vine weevils are notorious horticultural pests because their larvae feed on the root systems of garden plants - especially those grown in pots. The first sign of their presence is wilting of the leaves, by which time they have destroyed most of the root system.
Vine weevils are parthenogenetic, laying fertile eggs without the presnece of a male to fertilise them, so it only takes one weevil to start a pest infestation.
The adult weevil is a slow-moving cumbersome beetle that cannot fly, so when it's disturbed it simply tucks its legs under its body .....
.... and either drops to the ground or rolls onto its back, keeping perfectly still. In this state it's hard to spot in the soil. Eventually, when it thinks the coast is clear, it stretches out a tentative leg, rocks itself until those sickle-shaped claws grip a leaf, hauls itself right-way-up and ambles away.
Thanatosis is very common amongst weevils but it's most lively insect exponent is the click beetle, whose larvae are the notorious wireworms that burrow into potato crops.
These little beetles play dead the moment that they are touched but they revive quickly, in a particularly alarming way.
While they are on their backs a small peg locks the joint between their abdomen and their thorax, so when they flex their muscles great tension builds up. Eventually the attachment between the wing cases and thorax slips and they straighten instantaneously, somersaulting into the air and away to safety. It they land on their backs again they repeat the process, sometimes two or three times until they land right-way-up.
Labels:
click beetle,
Guardian Country Diary,
Thanatosis,
vine weevil
Monday, June 7, 2010
Weevil Intent....
I felt a deep sense of unease when I found this weevil crossing our garden path today, because it's a near certainty that its larvae, which feed underground on the roots of plants, are already doing serious damage to some of our plants. The worst culprits are vine weevils Otiorhynchus spp.- and I'm pretty sure that's what this is. The adults nibble conspicuous holes in the edges of leaves, using jaws on the end of that elongated snout, but the first sign that their larvae are at work is when a plant suddenly wilts - because its root system has been destroyed.
Vine weevils can be particular problem if you grow cyclamen or primula speicies, and since I have a collection of Primula auricula varieties growing in pots in the garden, maybe it's time to check their root systems for the fat white grubs of this destructive beetle.
Vine weevils belong to a tribe of beetles called the Otiorhynchini, notable for having no wings and for being able to breed without the need for males, reproducing clonally via parthenogenesis. This goes some way to explaining why they are so prolific - if males are needed, only the female half of the population can lay eggs but if a species is parthenogenetic every individual does so..... and vine weevils can lay up to 800 eggs. There are many closely-related species and you can find a fine illustration of some of them here.
Labels:
Beetles,
vine weevil
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