Tese
Sincronia fenológica, dimorfismo sexual e ontogênese em galhas de Pseudotectococcus rollinae Hodgson & Gonçalves (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Eriococcidae) em Rollinia laurifolia Schltdl. (Annonaceae)
Fecha
2008-06-06Autor
Samuel José de Melo Reis Gonçalves
Institución
Resumen
Rollinia laurifolia Schltdl. (Annonaceae) has leaf galls induced by Pseudotectococcus
rolliniae Hodgson & Gonçalves (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Eriococcidae), which presents sexual
dimorphism also observed on the galls. In this system, there is a phenological synchrony between
host and gall-inducing insects. R. laurifolia looses its leaves during the dry season and budburst
begin at the rainy season start. Several P. rolliniae nymphs induces similar leaf galls at young
leaves. Their sexual dimorphism occur at 8th gall development day. At this moment, galls induced
by females are spherical, bigger than that induced by males and have two chambers. There is more
phloem parenchyma and mechanical tissue inside this galls because females stay inside their galls
where they feed and will be inseminated. Galls induced by males are conical-shaped, smaller, and
have just one chamber. Also they present a shorter life cycle. At sixteen day adult winged males
leave their galls to find females. After insemination, females produce wax that protect inside ostiole
separating abaxial and adaxial chamber, where oviposition and egg hatching take place.
Pseudotectococcus rolliniae life cycles inside leaf galls last up 44 to 50 dias from females and up
14 to 20 from males. First instar nymphs (crawlers) are very active. They leave maternal galls and
they may find shelter before R. laurifolia leaf falling. So, they walk to stems where they induces
another gall type considered as dormancy galls, because reduction in metabolic activity. As rainy
season begins, an ecdysis will occur and second instar nymphs will induce leaf galls at young near
hatched leaves. This is new on Eriococcidae studies.