

Eteobalea sp. adult moth.
C.Paetel, CABI Biosciences |
Eteobalea serratella Treitschke
(Lepidoptera: Cosmopterygidae)
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by Rich
Hansen, USDA-APHIS-PPQ, Forestry Sciences Lab, Montana State University,
Bozeman, MT 59717-0278.

Dalmatian toadflax infestation:
W.Hartung, NRCS;
and plant (inset):
R.Hansen, USDA-APHIS
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Eteobalea serratella was approved for release
in the US in 1995. A few field releases have ben made in western Canada
and the western US, but no established populations have yet been confirmed.
(Background information about Dalmation
toadflax and yellow toadflax is available.)
Appearance
Eteobalea serratella adults are slender moths
about 8-9 mm long, with a wingspan of 16-18 mm. Wings are dark brown
with black and white spots. Adults are generally active in the evening
and before dawn.
Larvae are cream-colored caterpillars with brown
head capsules, and reach a maximum length of about 12 mm. They are
found in tunnels within toadflax roots.
E. serratella adults and larvae are very similar
to those of E. intermediella; the two species may be separated
only by examining male genitalia or the egg chorion.
Habitat
Grasslands, pastures, agricultural fields, and roadsides
infested with yellow or Dalmatian toadflax.
Pests attacked
Eteobalea serratella appears to primarily
utilize yellow toadflax, with Dalmatian toadflax as a relatively poor
host. Host specificity tests indicate that this species utilizes a
small number of perennial Eurasian species in the family Scrophulariaceae;
no North American plants so far tested were attacked.
Life cycle
Adults appear in early summer, living for several
weeks but apparently not feeding. After mating, females lay eggs,
in loose strings of 3-8, at or near the base of a toadflax stem. Each
female may lay up to 180 eggs.
Newly-hatched larvae enter the stem and mine down
into toadflax roots. Larvae feed within the root cortex, constructing
silk-lined tunnels. Generally, 3-7 larvae may be found within the
root system of a toadflax plant, depending on the size of the roots.
Mature larvae tunnel back to the root crown area or up into the base
of a stem and construct a chamber in which pupation occurs.
There is one generation per year in Europe, with
winter spent in the larval stage within toadflax roots.
Relative effectiveness
Larval root boring by Eteobalea spp. does
not usually kill toadflax plants directly, but does decrease flowering
and seed production and reduce plant vigor. There is not yet sufficient
information available to predict the efficacy of this agent under
North American field conditions.
Pesticide susceptibility
Unknown.
Conservation
Specifics are unknown. For general information about
conservation of natural enemies, see Conservation
in the Tutorial section on this site, or the Volume II, No. 1 Feature
Article on conservation in the Midwest
Biological Control News Online.
Commercial availability
Eteobalea serratella is not yet generally
available in North America.
References
Saner, M.A. and H. Müller-Schärer. 1994.
Impact of root mining by Eteobalea spp. on clonal growth and
sexual reproduction of common toadflax, Linaria vulgaris Mill.
Weed Res. 34: 199-204.
Saner, M.A., P. Jeanneret, and Müller-Schärer.
1994. Interaction among two biological control agents and the developmental
stage of their target weed, Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica
(L.) Mill. (Scrophulariaceae). Biocontrol Sci. & Technol. 4: 215-222.
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