Cornell University, Biological Control: A Guide to Natural Enemies in North America


Mecinus janthinus adult.
R.Richard, USDA-APHIS

Mecinus janthinus Germar
(Coleoptera: Curculionidae)

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

Mecinus janthinus was approved for release in the US in 1995. Field releases have been made at sites in western Canada and the western US. Some Canadian populations are established , but establishment at US sites has not yet been confirmed. (Background information about Dalmation toadflax and yellow toadflax is available.)

Appearance

Mecinus janthinus adults are shiny black, slender weevils about 3-4 mm long, with a pronounced snout. Beetles are found on toadflax foliage. The legless larvae are creamy-white in color with a light-brown head capsule, and appear C-shaped when viewed from the side. M. janthinus larvae are found tunneling within toadflax stems.

Habitat

Grasslands, pastures, agricultural fields, and roadsides infested with yellow or Dalmatian toadflax.

 

Pests attacked

M. janthinus attacks both Dalmatian and yellow toadflax. Host specificity tests indicate that only a few plants within the genus Linaria are utilized as hosts.

 

Life cycle

Mecinus janthinus adults emerge in late spring or early summer and feed on toadflax leaves and stems, and may live for several weeks to about a month. After a feeding period, adults mate and female weevils begin laying eggs in toadflax stems. Eggs are deposited singly in cavities chewed into the stems and sealed with a lid of chewed plant material.

Young larvae begin feeding within toadflax stems, creating tunnels that increase in size and length as larvae mature. Wilted shoots are an external symptom of this larval feeding. Larval development is completed in about a month, and mature larvae construct a cell within the mined stem in which pupation occurs.

Pupal development is completed in several weeks; newly-eclosed adults remain within pupal cells and overwinter. There is one generation per year.

Relative effectiveness

Mecinus janthinus larvae mine in toadflax stems. Though this damage does not typically kill plants, mined stems wilt and die with a corresponding reduction in flowering and seed production. This impact may be more pronounced in plants experiencing drought stress. However, long-term effects of M. janthinus on weed density are not yet known.

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

Mecinus janthinus is not yet generally available in the US.


References

Jeanneret, P. and D. Schroeder. 1992. Biology and host specificity of Mecinus janthinus Germar (Col.: Curculionidae), a candidate for the biological control of yellow and Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria vulgaris (L.) Mill. and Linaria dalmatica (L.) Mill. (Scrophulariaceae), in North America. Biocontrol Sci. and Technol. 2: 25-34.

Saner, M.A., P. Jeanneret, and H. 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.



©All material is protected by Section 107 of the 1976 copyright law.
Copyright is held by Cornell University.
Use of this material for educational purposes is encouraged. Please notify the editors of such use and cite the author (if credited on the page you are using). A recommended form for citing this website is:

Weeden, C.R., A. M. Shelton, and M. P. Hoffman. Biological Control: A Guide to Natural Enemies in North America.
http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/ accessed (date).

 


Suggestions, corrections, and/or comments are appreciated: Contact Tony Shelton (ams5@nysaes.cornell.edu).
http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/weedfeeders/mecinus_janthinus.html