2023
DOI: 10.1111/eea.13362
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The effects of warm and cold periods on resource depletion and emergence synchrony in diapausing Hypena opulenta: Implications for biological control of invasive swallow‐worts in North America

Ian M. Jones,
M. Lukas Seehausen,
Sandy M. Smith
et al.

Abstract: Temperature plays an important role in winter diapause of temperate insects. Its effects can cause problems for biological control programs, both for the establishment of insects in novel climates and for the mass rearing of insects in the laboratory. Hypena opulenta (Christoph) (Lepidoptera: Erebidae), a biological control agent for invasive swallow‐wort species in North America, has been observed to enter diapause in mid‐summer in its introduced range. Additionally, H. opulenta has proved complicated to mass… Show more

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“…The last four papers in this special issue address how altered abiotic conditions may affect biocontrol agents, studying species that have already been released in biocontrol programs. Jones et al (2023b) used pupal cold storage experiments to assess the effects of entering diapause early by a lepidopteran biocontrol agent observed in its introduced range where summer days are shorter than in its native range. They found no effects of cold storage on some key life-history traits and indicate their data may aid mass rearing programs in synchronising adult emergence for releases.…”
Section: Climate Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The last four papers in this special issue address how altered abiotic conditions may affect biocontrol agents, studying species that have already been released in biocontrol programs. Jones et al (2023b) used pupal cold storage experiments to assess the effects of entering diapause early by a lepidopteran biocontrol agent observed in its introduced range where summer days are shorter than in its native range. They found no effects of cold storage on some key life-history traits and indicate their data may aid mass rearing programs in synchronising adult emergence for releases.…”
Section: Climate Adaptationmentioning
confidence: 99%