Rhynchophorus palmarum

Summary

The South American palm weevil, Rhynchophorus palmarum, is a species of snout beetle. The adults are relatively large black beetles of approximately one and a half inch in length, and the larvae may grow to two inches in length.[1]

Rhynchophorus palmarum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Infraorder: Cucujiformia
Family: Curculionidae
Genus: Rhynchophorus
Species:
R. palmarum
Binomial name
Rhynchophorus palmarum
Synonyms
  • Calandra palmarum
  • Cordyle barbirostris Thunberg
  • Cordyle palmarum
  • Curculio palmarum
  • Rhynchophorus cycadis Erichson
  • Rhynchophorus depressus Chevrolat
  • Rhynchophorus languinosus Chevrolat

Biology and behavior edit

These insects are attracted to the release of volatile compounds produced by injured palm trees.[2] The larvae burrow through the hearts of palms, and their feeding can potentially kill an infested palm or serve as an avenue for secondary infections of bacterial disease. It is considered an important pest of cultivated coconut, date and oil palms, attacking thirty-five different species in twelve different families.[3][4][5] It has also been documented as an occasional pest of sugar cane. This insect serves as vector for the Bursaphelenchus cocophilus nematode[MP 1] — the cause of red ring disease in coconuts,[4] oilpalm, and dates.[MP 2][MP 3] R. palmarum carries the disease in the form of dauer larvae, a survival form.[MP 4] By the time one observes symptoms, the palm is usually already dead. Weevils are infected while feeding as adults or larvae, but only female weevils carry a large internal infestation around their oviducts and are capable of transmitting the nematode during oviposition.[6] Females are capable of laying as many as 693 eggs.[5] Eggs will hatch in three to five days, and spend seven to eight weeks as larvae, feeding on the heart of the palm. They will emerge from the heart of the palm to pupate in a cocoon woven from palm fibers either in the boot of palm-leaf petioles, or in leaf debris at the base of the palm. Pupation can take from one to three weeks. Adults will live from five to eight weeks.[7]

Host plants edit

Secondary hosts edit

  • sugarcane
  • banana
  • Cacao
  • custard apple
  • breadfruit
  • papaya
  • citrus
  • mango
  • avocado
  • guava

Distribution edit

The weevil's native range extends across much of South America from Argentina to Paraguay and north through South and Central America to central Mexico and the Caribbean (Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent, Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, and perhaps Cuba, Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico).[1] Recent finds in Arizona and Texas do not seem to reflect established populations, but more western populations are established (as of 2010) in Tijuana, Mexico and San Diego County, California (San Ysidro, Bonita, and Spring Valley) and causing serious damage.[9]

Cuisine edit

 
Skewers of suri (Rhynchophorus palmarum larvae) for sale by a food vendor in Iquitos, Peru

The larvae have been consumed for centuries as food by native South American populations as a source of protein, minerals, and vitamins A and E.[10] These beetles and their larvae are known by many common names in South America: cucarrón, cigarrón, casanga, suri (Peru), chontacuro (Ecuador), gualpa (Colombia), mojojoi, mojomoi, mojotoi, mukint, mujin.[11] and are used in traditional medicine for the treatment of cough, asthma and other respiratory ailments.[12]

Notes edit

  1. ^ p. 322, "INTERACTION WITH OTHER PATHOGENS Migratory endoparasitic nematodes live concomitantly and interact with other microorganisms, of which several are pathogens to the same host. ... A particular interaction is observed with a number of aphelenchid species, such as ... B. cocophilus, which need[s] an insect vector for [its] dissemination, the vector itself being a parasite of the common host."
  2. ^ p. 315, "Bursaphelenchus cocophilus (red ring nematode) is vectored by Rhynchophorus palmarum weevils and causes red ring disease in several palm species in the Caribbean and Latin America."
  3. ^ p. 322, "Hosts of B. cocophilus are confined to the family Palmae, where the nematode is known to infect more than 17 species. Most palm species appear to be susceptible to inoculation by the nematode, but resulting disease severity and symptoms (red ring) are variable. The most economically important species attacked by B. cocophilus are coconut palm, the African oil palm, and the date palm."
  4. ^ p. 315, "[Red Ring nematodes] have specialized survival stages, termed dauers, which are usually ectophoretic and use the insect for transport."

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c "The South American Palm Weevil A New Threat to Palms in California and the Southwest" (PDF).
  2. ^ Giblin-Davis RM, et al. 1996. "Chemical and behavioral ecology of palm weevils (Curculionidae: Rhychophorinae)". Florida Entomologist 79: 153-167.
  3. ^ Esser, R. and J. Meredith. 1987. "Red ring nematode". Nemotology Circular of Florida Department of Agriculture No. 141. Gainesville, FL.
  4. ^ a b Griffith, R. 1987. "Red ring disease of coconut palm". Plant Disease 71: 193–196.
  5. ^ a b Sanchez, P and H. Cerda. 1993. "El complejo de Rhynchophorus palmarum/Bursaphelenchus cocophilus en palmas". Boletín di Entomología Venezolana 8, 1–18
  6. ^ Chinchilla CM. 1991. "The red ring little leaf syndrome in oil palm and coconut palm" Archived 2009-01-30 at the Wayback Machine. ASD Oil Palm Papers No. 1, 1-17. (21 June 2009).
  7. ^ OEPP/EPPO (European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization/Organisation Europeenne et Mediterraneenne pour la Protection des Plantes). 2005. Data sheets on quarantine pests. Rhynchophorus palmarum. Bulletin (35): 468-471.
  8. ^ a b c Jaramillo-Vivanco, Tatiana; Balslev, Henrik; Montúfar, Rommel; Cámara, Rosa M.; Giampieri, Francesca; Battino, Maurizio; Cámara, Montaña; Alvarez-Suarez, José M. (2022). "Three Amazonian palms as underestimated and little-known sources of nutrients, bioactive compounds and edible insects". Food Chemistry. 372: 131273. doi:10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.131273. PMID 34649030. S2CID 238991296. 131273.
  9. ^ [1] Biology and Management of South American Palm Weevil, Rhynchophorus palmarum (L.) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), in California
  10. ^ "Gusanos chontacuros son parte de la dieta indígena en la Amazonía". 12 October 2009.
  11. ^ Cartay, Rafael; Dimitrov, Vladimir; Feldman, Michael (2020-01-09). "An insect bad for agriculture but good for human consumption: The case of Rhynchophorus palmarum: A social science perspective". Edible Insects. doi:10.5772/intechopen.87165. ISBN 9781789856361.
  12. ^ González-Jaramillo, Nancy; Bailon-Moscoso, Natalia; Duarte-Casar, Rodrigo; Romero-Benavides, Juan Carlos (January 2022). "Peach Palm (Bactris gasipaes Kunth.): Ancestral Tropical Staple with Future Potential". Plants. 11 (22): 3134. doi:10.3390/plants11223134. ISSN 2223-7747. PMC 9695847. PMID 36432863.

Bibliography edit

External links edit