2014
DOI: 10.5656/ksae.2014.07.0.034
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The Effect of Winter Temperature on the Survival of Lantern Fly, Lycorma delicatula (Hemiptera: Fulgoridae) Eggs

Abstract: Lantern fly(Lycorma delicatula) is a major invasive pest that causes withering symptom of agricultural crops by sucking tree sap and sooty mold symptom by producing honeydew. This study was conducted to investigate the occurrence pattern of lantern fly in grape orchards in Gyeonggi area and the effect of winter temperature on L. delicatula egg survival during 2010 to 2013. In Gyeonggi areas, overwintered L. delicatula eggs began to hatch from early May and nymphs peaked in mid May. Adults emerged from late Jul… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The five variables related to winter temperature (Bio 06, Bio 09, Bio 10, under_-11_Jan, and min_tmp_jan), which are supposed to determine the hatching rate of L. delicatula , were not selected for the distribution model of L. delicatula . Although these variables were proposed as important variable determining annual population size in many papers [6, 26-28], they did not explain distribution of L. delicatula in this study. This suggests that low lethal temperature (i.e., around −12.7 °C to −16.5 °C) is over than average winter temperature in Korea, like Bio 05.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 60%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The five variables related to winter temperature (Bio 06, Bio 09, Bio 10, under_-11_Jan, and min_tmp_jan), which are supposed to determine the hatching rate of L. delicatula , were not selected for the distribution model of L. delicatula . Although these variables were proposed as important variable determining annual population size in many papers [6, 26-28], they did not explain distribution of L. delicatula in this study. This suggests that low lethal temperature (i.e., around −12.7 °C to −16.5 °C) is over than average winter temperature in Korea, like Bio 05.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 60%
“…Among them, two overwintering related variables, development related variable and main host (i.e., grape) distribution of L. delicatula , were used as these variables expected to be directly related with occurrence of L. delicatula in Korea. There were multiple studies [6, 26-28] that overwintering egg mortality of L. delicatula was affected by number of days with minimum temperature below −11°C and average daily minimum temperature in January. Thus, these variables (i.e., under_-11_Jan and min_tmp_jan) were created with the same climatic data and interpolation method, and then used for 19 bioclimatic variables.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The five variables related to winter temperature (Bio 06, Bio 09, Bio 10, under_-11_Jan, and min_tmp_jan), which are supposed to determine the hatching rate of L. delicatula, were not selected for the distribution model of L. delicatula. Although these variables were proposed as important variable determining annual population size in many papers [6,[26][27][28], they did not explain distribution of L. delicatula in this study. This suggests that low lethal temperature (i.e., around -12.7 °C to -16.5 °C) is over than average winter temperature in Korea, like Bio 05.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…There were multiple studies [6,[26][27][28] that overwintering egg mortality of L. delicatula was affected by number of days with minimum temperature below -11°C and average daily minimum temperature in January. Thus, these variables (i.e., under_-11_Jan and min_tmp_jan) were created with the same climatic data and interpolation method, and then used for 19 bioclimatic variables.…”
Section: Environmental Variables Related To L Delicatulamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10 After emerging from eggs starting in May, its nymphs feed on a variety of host plants from 81 taxa worldwide. [11][12][13][14] As they start to develop into adults from late July, SLF adults feed on a narrower range of host plants of 47 taxa. Finally, the adults oviposit egg masses on hosts belonging to 28 taxa between late September and November.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%