| Literature DB >> 25347841 |
Karen N Stratman1, William A Overholt2, James P Cuda3, A Mukherjee4, R Diaz1, Michael D Netherland5, Patrick C Wilson1.
Abstract
A chironomid midge, Cricotopus lebetis (Sublette) (Diptera: Chironomidae), was discovered attacking the apical meristems of Hydrilla verticillata (L.f. Royle) in Crystal River, Citrus Co., Florida in 1992. The larvae mine the stems of H. verticillata and cause basal branching and stunting of the plant. Temperature-dependent development, cold tolerance, and the potential distribution of the midge were investigated. The results of the temperature-dependent development study showed that optimal temperatures for larval development were between 20 and 30°C, and these data were used to construct a map of the potential number of generations per year of C. lebetis in Florida. Data from the cold tolerance study, in conjunction with historical weather data, were used to generate a predicted distribution of C. lebetis in the United States. A distribution was also predicted using an ecological niche modeling approach by characterizing the climate at locations where C. lebetis is known to occur and then finding other locations with similar climate. The distributions predicted using the two modeling approaches were not significantly different and suggested that much of the southeastern United States was climatically suitable for C. lebetis.Entities:
Keywords: biological control; degree day; distribution; predicted distribution; temperature requirement
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25347841 PMCID: PMC5443592 DOI: 10.1093/jisesa/ieu015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
North American occurrence records of C. lebetis
| Location | Latitude | Longitude | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baton Rouge, LA | 30.4619° N | 91.1431° W |
|
| Natchitoches, LA | 31.7610° N | 93.0861° W |
|
| Farmersville, LA | 32.7528° N | 92.4046° W |
|
| Lake Tohopekaliga, FL | 28.2414° N | 81.4064° W | K.N.S. (unpublished data) |
| Lake Istokpoga, FL | 27.3944° N | 81.2445° W | K.N.S. (unpublished data) |
| Bulldozer Canal, FL | 27.9976° N | 80.7939° W | K.N.S. (unpublished data) |
| Lake Rowell, FL | 29.9185° N | 82.1603° W | K.N.S. (unpublished data) |
| Crystal River | 28.8917° N | 82.6033° W |
|
| Lake Brantley, FL | 28.6935° N | 81.4210° W | D. Denson (personal communication) |
| Village Lake, FL | 28.3702° N | 81.5325° W | D. Denson (personal communication) |
| EPCOT Lake, FL | 28.3678° N | 81.4956° W | D. Denson (personal communication) |
| West Feeder Canal, FL | 26.3012° N | 81.0728° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| West Feeder Canal, FL | 26.2907° N | 80.9720° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| North Feeder Canal, FL | 26.3390° N | 80.9796° W | D. Strom (personal communication |
| North Feeder Canal, FL | 26.2913° N | 80.9703° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| L4 Canal, FL | 26.3299° N | 80.8826° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| 28 Interceptor Canal, FL | 26.2586° N | 80.9532° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| L28 Borrow Canal, FL | 26.3299° N | 80.8807° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| L28 Borrow Canal, FL | 26.0278° N | 80.8303° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| Harney Pond Canal, FL | 27.0911° N | 81.0702° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| Harney Pond Canal, FL | 27.0164° N | 81.0702° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| Indian Prairie Canal, FL | 27.1526° N | 81.0685° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| Indian Prairie Canal, FL | 27.0977° N | 81.0104° W | D. Strom (personal communication) |
| South Lake Istopkoga, FL | 27.3039° N | 81.1299° W | R. Rutter (personal communication) |
| Caloosahatchee River, FL | 26.7868° N | 81.2655° W | R. Rutter (personal communication) |
| Arbuckle Creek, FL | 27.5025° N | 81.3354° W | R. Rutter (personal communication) |
| North Prong Alligator Creek, FL | 26.8952° N | 81.9702° W | R. Rutter (personal communication) |
| Southwest, FL | 27.0200° N | 81.3026° W | R. Rutter (personal communication) |
Geopositions of records provided by Dana Denson, Doug Strom, and Robert Rutter are estimated from label descriptions and personal communications.
Appendix B.MaxEnt model background used to predict potential distribution of C. lebetis . Model background is based on the Köppen–Geiger climate zone polygons containing one or more records of C. lebetis .
Bioclimatic variables and their loadings on three PCA axes used to examine the similarity between the distributions predicted by the MaxEnt ecological niche model and the NAPPFAST physiological model
| Climate variables | Variable descriptions | Axis 1 (81%) | Axis 2 (16%) | Axis 3 (2%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bio1 | Annual mean temperature | 0.955 | 0.283 | −0.078 |
| Bio4 | Temperature seasonality (SD × 100) | −0.936 | 0.322 | 0.142 |
| Bio6 | Min. temperature of coldest month | 0.991 | −0.066 | 0.105 |
| Bio7 | Temperature annual range | −0.907 | 0.373 | −0.195 |
| Bio10 | Mean temperature of warmest quarter | 0.510 | 0.858 | 0.064 |
| Bio11 | Mean temperature of coldest quarter | 0.994 | −0.003 | −0.106 |
Values > 0 indicate a positive contribution, whereas those <0 indicate a negative contribution to the axis. Values in parenthesis denote the percent of variability described by each axis, cumulatively explaining ∼99% of variability.
Fig. 1.Percent survival of C. lebetis larvae at constant temperatures. Different letters above bars represent statistically different means (analysis of variance and Student-Newman-Keuls (SNK) test, P < 0.01). Error bars ± SEM.
Fig. 2.Developmental rate of C. lebetis larvae at constant temperatures between 15 and 35°C.
Fig. 3.Brière-1 nonlinear model of the relationship of temperature and developmental rate of C. lebetis . The estimated upper and lower thresholds are 36.0 and 9.5°C, respectively.
Fig. 4.Predicted number of generations per year of C. lebetis in Florida.
Fig. 5.Survival of C. lebetis larvae at different exposure times at (A) 5°C and (B) 7.5°C. Single dots are observed values, and lines are expected value of the logistic regression. Maximum survival occurred at 7.5°C with an exposure time of 16 d.
Fig. 6.Predicted distributions of C. lebetis based on the NAPPFAST model using the area south of the LT 90 isothermal line for survival of larvae at 5°C and the predicted distribution based on the MaxEnt ecological niche model using six climate variables (see text). Values in parentheses following the legends for the NAPPFAST and MaxEnt predictions indicate percent of unique grid cells predicted by each method.
Fig. 7.Model prediction of climate suitability for C. lebetis using known sampling locations and climate records. Inertia ellipses (1.5 SD) were drawn around the centroids of climatic envelops predicted by the physiological and MaxEnt models. The enclosed correlation circle describes the importance of individual bioclimatic variables along the two PCA axes. See Table 1 for descriptions of climatic variables and contribution of individual variables to PCA axes. Note that some physiological prediction symbols (yellow squares) are hidden beneath the MaxEnt symbols.