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1996

Sammendrag

Studies on the population dynamic of Mamestra brassicae (L.) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) were conducted during 1988-1992 in order to improve forecasting and control. The influence of temperature on development, fecundity and survival were investigated in climatic chambers, and lower developmental thresholds and thermal requirements were established for the preoviposition period and the immature stages. Pheromone traps were tested in cabbage fields at 5 locations in south-eastern Norway during 1989-1991. The trap catches were low at all locations and years, and the traps could therefore not be recommended for practical monitoring. A degree-day model for prediction of favourable times for assessment of infestation level and insecticide application was developed, validated and implemented. Mortality in the immature stages, and larval dispersal, was investigated in the laboratory and in the field. Highest mortality was found in first instar larvae and in hibernating pupae. The mortality in first instar larvae was probably caused by failure to locate and establish feeding sites and predation, whereas the winter loss probably was caused by unfavourable weather conditions. Life tables for five generations of a natural population of M. brassicae on white cabbage in Ås during 1988-1992 was constructed and analysed. Generation survival was very low, and the key factor was mortality in small larvae. The stage specific mortality appeared to be mainly density-independent. Parasitoids and pathogens were of little importance in controlling the M. brassicae population, although they were more or less persistently present throughout the experimental period. Trichogramma semblidis (Aurivillius) (Trichogrammatidae) was reared from eggs, and Microplitis mediator (Haliday) and Aleiodes (Aleiodes) sp., both Braconidae, were reared from larvae. Erynia virescens (Entomophtorales) was identified in medium and large larvae. Implications of the results in this study for integrated pest management is discussed, and management tactics are proposed.

Sammendrag

Aggressive bark beetles kill healthy conifers through pheromone-mediated mass attacks. The exact mechanism by which trees are killed is still disputed, but phytopathogenic blue-stain fungi associated with the beetles are probably involved in most cases. This thesis compares the blue-stain flora of five bark beetle species that colonize Norway spruce of different resistance. The aggressive Ips typographus can kill healthy trees, while the other species are non-aggressive and colonize either severly stressed or dying trees (the facultatively parasitic Ips duplicatus, Polygraphus poligraphus and Pityogenes chalcographus), or dead trees (the saprophagic Hylurgops palliates). Ips typographus and I. duplicatus were both found to carry very high frequencies of the phytopathogenic fungus Ceratocystis polonica. This fungus has previously been found associated only with I. typographus, and has been shown to be pathogenic to Norway spruce in experimental mass inoculations. The other bark beetles carried no known pathogenic fungi. The phytopathogenicity of four of the isolated blue-stain fungi were evaluated through mass and low-density inoculation in young Norway spruce trees. Mass inoculations confirmed C. polonica\"s pathogenicity, while the other fungi, which are associated with non-aggressive beetles, were not pathogenic (Ophiostoma piceae, cfr. Ambrosiell sp., Dark sterile sp.A). Low-density inoculations revealed only small differences between the four fungi in phloem necrosis length. Necrosis length is used as a standard criterion of fungal pathogenicity, but it was not useful for assessing the pathogenicity of the fungi in the fungus-host tree system under study here. Ceratocystis polonica was found to penertrate deeper into the sapwood and induce deeper sapwood desiccation than the other fungi. The ability to invade sapwood is probably more important for fungal pathogenicity than the ability to colonize phloem, and may thus be a better criterion for assessing the pathogenicity of blue-stain fungi. General aspects of the association between bark beetles and blue-stain fungi are discussed.

Sammendrag

A high trapping efficiency was found both for window traps and trunk-window traps, while the efficiency of extraction cylinders was low. Trunk-window traps are suitable for comparison of different substrates within the same forest environment, while comparative studies of different forest environments are more difficult, due to baiting effects. Window trap captures are more suitable for comparing different forest environments, but are related to ecological conditions over wide areas, and are almost unaffected by substrate conditions in the near surroundings of the traps

Sammendrag

There is a growing awareness to preserve the biodiversity in the forest ecosystems. A first step in biodiversity research is to find out what species really are found in the forest, using the scientific tool named taxonomy. Still there are species-rich groups of forest insects which have been poorly researched, and which include several unclearities concerning the species identities. One such group is the free-developing gall midges connected with litter, dead wood and fungi in the ground layer of the forest. This papers intends to improve the taxonomy of one genus in this group - Anaretella (Enderlein 1911), including the description of two new species and a key to the current species within the Holarctic region