2007
DOI: 10.2317/0022-8567(2007)80[78:oalndi]2.0.co;2
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Orchestes Alni (L.) Newly Discovered in North America (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)

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Cited by 14 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…It is uncertain whether S.multispicata also will colonize American elm species; the American species of Ulmus are in a phylogenetically different subgenus, Oreoptelea (Spach) Planchon, whereas all Palearctic species belong to subgenus Ulmus L. (Wiegrefe et al 1994). Larvae of the Siberian Elm specialist Orchestessteppensis have not yet been confirmed on American elm species (Looney et al 2012), but adults have been found feeding on U.americana (Anderson et al 2007), and in Ottawa in 2018 we observed some Orchestes mines on U.americana in association with abundant O.steppensis mines on U.pumila . Another invasive Palearctic leafminer, the tenthredinid Fenusaulmi Sundevall, 1844, has been recently noted to colonize the indigenous North American species of Ulmus (Anonymous 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…It is uncertain whether S.multispicata also will colonize American elm species; the American species of Ulmus are in a phylogenetically different subgenus, Oreoptelea (Spach) Planchon, whereas all Palearctic species belong to subgenus Ulmus L. (Wiegrefe et al 1994). Larvae of the Siberian Elm specialist Orchestessteppensis have not yet been confirmed on American elm species (Looney et al 2012), but adults have been found feeding on U.americana (Anderson et al 2007), and in Ottawa in 2018 we observed some Orchestes mines on U.americana in association with abundant O.steppensis mines on U.pumila . Another invasive Palearctic leafminer, the tenthredinid Fenusaulmi Sundevall, 1844, has been recently noted to colonize the indigenous North American species of Ulmus (Anonymous 2015).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…The species was first found in North America around 2003, then misidentified as the European O.alni (Linnaeus, 1758) (Anderson et al 2007, Looney et al 2012), and has since spread widely over the United States, including the west (Looney et al 2012). Also in Asia this species has probably been spreading, and is reported as a local pest species in China (Li et al 2017).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This adventive European species, associated with Ulmus , was first reported from western North America by Anderson et al (2007) and has since become widespread (Looney et al 2012, Douglas et al 2013). The above record is the first report of this species from the Maritime Provinces.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Sweeney et al 2012;Pitkin et al 2018). In 2003, O. alni was redocumented in North America (Illinois) and re-identified as a valid taxon based on beetle morphology and its tropic specialization on elms (Anderson et al 2007). Later on, it was recorded as a serious elm pest in more than 20 American states and Canadian provinces, suggesting that it had been introduced many years before (Looney et al 2012;Sweeney et al 2012).…”
Section: Orchestes Steppensis Korotayev 2016 (Curculionidae)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cameraria ohridella and A. oinophylla were described only after they had started invading Europe. Orchestes steppensis was two times misidentified when it invaded North America, first as the Holarctic O. testaceus and then as the European O. alni (Anderson et al 2007). Profenusa thomsoni was erroneously identified in North America twice: first to a local species, Profenusa alumnata (Benson 1959), and then to another invasive birch leafminer, Fenusa pumila, (Digweed et al 2009).…”
Section: Overlooked and Erroneously Identified Invasive Leafminersmentioning
confidence: 99%