Biological Control of the Ambermarked Birch Leafminer (Profenusa thomsoni) in Alaska

The ambermarked birch leafminer (AMBLM) (Profenusa thomsoni) is an invasive leafminer native to the Palearctic from the United Kingdom to Turkey to Japan. It was introduced to the eastern United States in 1921 and has since spread to the mid-western U.S. states and Canadian provinces. This leafminer...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Soper, Anna L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2012
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Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/667
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1668&context=open_access_dissertations
Description
Summary:The ambermarked birch leafminer (AMBLM) (Profenusa thomsoni) is an invasive leafminer native to the Palearctic from the United Kingdom to Turkey to Japan. It was introduced to the eastern United States in 1921 and has since spread to the mid-western U.S. states and Canadian provinces. This leafminer was introduced to Alaska in 1996, where it has since spread over 140,000 acres, from Haines to Fairbanks. The most severe damage is found throughout the Anchorage bowl, which extends south to Girdwood and North to Wasilla. The damage caused by P. thomsoni can be severe, defoliating entire trees. In 2006, it was noted that urban areas in Alaska experienced higher densities of AMBLM leafminer than adjacent forested areas. To examine the effects of habitat on leafminer densities, twenty permanent plots were established in Anchorage, Alaska in 2006 and were classified as urban and forest (ten each). Temperature records for the twenty permanent sites showed that average daily temperatures and average accumulated degree-days differed significantly between urban and forest sites. In 2007 and 2008, leafminer abundance in each habitat was examined weekly at six plots (three urban and three forest) within the city of Anchorage. Asynchronous emergence, flight, and oviposition times were observed between leafminers in forests versus urban areas, with peaks of these parameters in forests being about three weeks later than in urban areas. To control the spread and effects of P. thomsoni, a cooperative biological control project was launched in 2003 and the parasitoid wasp Lathrolestes thomsoni (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) was selected for release. Parasitized leafminer larvae were collected from the provinces of Northwest Territories and Alberta, in Canada and transferred in soil tubs as pre-pupae to Alaska. From 2004-2008, 3636 adult L. thomsoni adults were released in birch tree stands in Anchorage, Soldotna, and Fairbanks, Alaska. Parasitoids have been recovered at all release sites in Alaska and have established populations ...