2013
DOI: 10.1590/s1984-46702013000200004
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Biology and life table of Dirphia araucariae (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae): A herbivore of potentially high impact on Araucaria angustifolia

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
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“…The first studies on the duration of the immature stages of D. moderata (Dias, 1988;Zanuncio et al, 1994;Pereira et al, 2008a, b) recorded cycles with an average of 90-130 days for a complete development of immature stages, which corresponds to approximately 3.5 generations per year, and this same pattern was corroborated in this study for D. moderata in the municipality of Cruz das Almas, as previously determined for other species of the genus recorded in the literature, such as Dirphia araucariae Jones, 1908, and Dirphia dolosa Bouvier, 1929(Specht et al, 2012Zenker et al, 2013), with the same proportion of days of each stage and larval instars, except for pre-pupae and pupa, which may vary according to the host plant, as observed by Pereira et al (2008b). This pattern of ontogeny of the immature stages has also been recorded for other genera of Hemileucinae, such as Lonomia Walker, 1855, Automeris Hübner [1819], and Periga Walker, 1855, specially for hot climates, characterizing such genera as multivoltine (Lorini, 1999;Specht et al, 2006bSpecht et al, , 2007bSpecht et al, , 2011.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…The first studies on the duration of the immature stages of D. moderata (Dias, 1988;Zanuncio et al, 1994;Pereira et al, 2008a, b) recorded cycles with an average of 90-130 days for a complete development of immature stages, which corresponds to approximately 3.5 generations per year, and this same pattern was corroborated in this study for D. moderata in the municipality of Cruz das Almas, as previously determined for other species of the genus recorded in the literature, such as Dirphia araucariae Jones, 1908, and Dirphia dolosa Bouvier, 1929(Specht et al, 2012Zenker et al, 2013), with the same proportion of days of each stage and larval instars, except for pre-pupae and pupa, which may vary according to the host plant, as observed by Pereira et al (2008b). This pattern of ontogeny of the immature stages has also been recorded for other genera of Hemileucinae, such as Lonomia Walker, 1855, Automeris Hübner [1819], and Periga Walker, 1855, specially for hot climates, characterizing such genera as multivoltine (Lorini, 1999;Specht et al, 2006bSpecht et al, , 2007bSpecht et al, , 2011.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…In Hemileucinae, the incubation of eggs covers approximately 9%, 12%, 23% or 25% of immature development (Dias, 1988;Lorini, 1999Lorini, , 2008Specht et al, 2006bSpecht et al, , 2007aSpecht et al, ,b, 2010Specht et al, , 2011, 12% corresponds to a general pattern for genus Dirphia, according to Zanuncio et al (1994); Pereira et al (2008a,b) and Santos et al (2011). D. moderata has an incubation period between 15 and 18 days, similar to D. dolosa (Specht et al, 2012), differing from the species D. araucariae, with an embryo period corresponding to 16%, with approximately 26 days of duration (Zenker et al, 2013). In general, egg morphology of D. moderata resemble those described for other species of the genus (Specht et al, 2012;Zenker et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
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“…by Lepidoptera species such as the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana; Lorimer and Bauer, 1983), the diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella; Niu et al, 2013), Streblote panda (Calvo and Molina, 2005), and Dirphia araucariae (Zenker et al, 2013). Among males increased body size can result in higher mating frequencies (e.g., Makee and Saour, 2001) and production of larger spermatophores (Royer and McNeil, 1993).…”
Section: Discussion A) Do Frugivores Grow Bigger and Survive Better Tmentioning
confidence: 99%