
Mounted specimen of an adult rove beetle. J.Ogrodnick
Aleochara bilineata
(Coleoptera: Staphylinidae)
The rove beetles are the largest North American beetle family. Most are
predaceous, and they are common in organic matter. Aleochara
bilineata as an adult is predaceous, but its larvae are parasitic.
Appearance
A. bilineata adults are glossy black with short coarse hairs
and are about 5-6 mm long. They have very small, reddish-brown,
inconspicuous forewings beneath which the membranous hindwings are
elaborately folded. The forewings look like pads on the upper abdomen.
The long abdomen is held aloft like a scorpion if the beetles are
disturbed. Well-developed "jaws" cross in front of the head of both
adults and larvae. Adults are active, strong fliers.
Eggs are oval, about 0.5 mm long and 0.4 mm wide, and are covered
with a gelatin-like material which is pale green at first and turns
darker after a few days. First instar larvae are pale brown, about 1.5
mm long, slender, segmented, and tapered toward the anterior. They have
large heads. The parasitic second and third instar larvae are white,
have rudimentary legs, and are found within the host puparium.
Habitat
(Crops)
Cole crops, onions, turnips, radish, corn, and others.
Pests Attacked
Root maggot eggs, larvae, and pupae, especially the cabbage and
onion maggot.
Life Cycle
A. bilineata overwinters as a first instar larva within a
host puparium. Two days after mating, females begin laying tiny,
whitish elliptical eggs--about 15 per day with an average of 700 per
season. Eggs are deposited in the soil among the roots of root
maggot-infested plants. Larvae hatch in about 5 to 10 days and actively
search for root maggot puparia in the surrounding soil. The larva
punctures the host puparium, enters, and begins feeding. The entire
host pupa is consumed. Although two or more larvae may occasionally
enter the same puparium, only one will survive to maturity.
A.
bilineata pupates within the host puparium and emerges as an adult
after 30 to 40 days. The overwintering larvae emerge in the second half
of July, and the second generation emerges at the end of August or in
early September. Adults live 40 to 60 days, and the life cycle, from
egg to adult is about 6 weeks. There may be two generations per year.
Relative Effectiveness
A. bilineata adults may consume up to five root maggot
larvae per day--a pair may destroy 1200 eggs and 130 larvae, and during
their lifetime their offspring may parasitize several hundred pupae.
Adults are cannibalistic, eating their own eggs and attacking other
adults when food supplies are low.
Adult rove beetles may not
emerge in spring until several weeks after the overwintering root maggot
adults emerge. This is too late to suppress early season crop damage,
although late season parasitism of cabbage maggot pupae may sometimes be
as high as 90% to 95%. In one field study, parasitism ranged between
30% and 70%.
A. bilineata has been mass reared in the
former Soviet Union, Europe, and Canada for control of root maggots. It
may therefore be feasible to mass release adults at the beginning of the
season to increase predation and parasitism of the first generation of
root maggots.
Pesticide Susceptibility
Laboratory tests showed A. bilineata to be highly
susceptible to pyrethroid insecticides. A strain of A. bilineata
selected for tolerance to cyclodiene-type insecticides proved successful
as a natural enemy of cabbage maggots in Canadian trials in the 1960's.
In a 1980 field study, the insecticide chlorfenvinphos used in
conjunction with A. bilineata successfully controlled cabbage
maggots, although parasitism was reduced.
Conservation
Rove beetles are found under debris and rocks, near water, in
compost and piles of decaying material, or in the crop canopy. The
adults have been found in sweet corn tassels and silks late in the
season. Hedgerows and shelter belts may provide protection for adult
beetles.
Commercial Availability
Rove beetles are not yet commercially available from North American
insectaries, although mass rearing techniques have been developed.
References
Colhoun, E.H. (1953) Notes on the stages and the biology of Baryodma
ontarionis Casey (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae), a parasite of the
cabbage maggot, Hylemya brassicae Bouché (Diptera:
Anthomyiidae). Can. Entomol., 85: 1-8.
Finlayson, D.G., Mackenzie, J.R., and Campbell, C.J. (1980)
Interactions of insecticides, a Carabid predator, a Staphylinid
parasite, and cabbage maggots in cauliflower. Environ. Entomol., 9:
789-794.
Hoffmann, M.P. and Frodsham, A.C. (1993) Natural Enemies of
Vegetable Insect Pests. Cooperative Extension, Cornell University,
Ithaca, NY. 63 pp.
Read, D.C. (1962) Notes on the life history of Aleochara
bilineata (Gyll.) (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae), and on its potential
value as a control agent for the cabbage maggot, Hylemya brassicae (Bouché) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae). Can. Entomol., 94: 417-424.
Samsoe-Peterson,
L. (1985) Laboratory tests to investigate the effects of pesticides on
two beneficial arthropods: a predatory mite (Phytoseiulus
persimilis) and a rove beetle (Aleochara bilineata). Pest.
Sci., 16:321-331.
Whistlecraft, J.W., Harris, C.R., Tolman, J.H., and Tomlin, A.D.
(1985) Mass-rearing techniques for Aleochara bilineata
(Coleoptera: Staphylinidae). J. Econ. Entomol., 78: 995-997.
Wishart, G. (1957) Surveys of parasites of Hylemya spp. (Diptera:
Anthomyiidae) that attack cruciferous crops in Canada. Can. Entomol.,
89: 450-454.
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