Longhorn beetles are among the most important groups of invasive forest insects worldwide. In parallel, they represent one of the most well-studied insect groups in terms of chemical ecology. Longhorn beetle aggregation-sex pheromones are commonly used as trap lures for specific and generic surveillance programs at points of entry and may play a key role in determining the success or failure of exotic species establishment. An exotic species might be more likely to establish in a novel habitat if it relies on a pheromone channel that is different to that of native species active at the same time of year and day, allowing for unhindered mate location (i.e., pheromone-free space hypothesis). In this study, we first tested the attractiveness of single pheromone components (i.e., racemic 3-hydroxyhexan-2-one, racemic 3-hydroxyoctan-2-one, and syn-2,3-hexanediol), and their binary and tertiary combinations, to native and exotic longhorn beetle species in Canada and Italy. Second, we exploited trap catches to determine their seasonal flight activity. Third, we used pheromone-baited "timer traps" to determine longhorn beetle daily flight activity. The response to single pheromones and their combinations was mostly species specific but the combination of more than one pheromone component allowed catch of multiple species simultaneously in Italy. The response of the exotic species to pheromone components, coupled with results on seasonal and daily flight activity, provided partial support for the pheromone-free space hypothesis. This study aids in the understanding of longhorn beetle chemical ecology and confirms that pheromones can play a key role in longhorn beetle invasions.
High‐altitude insects are expected to be strongly affected by climate change because of their limited range. Phytophagous species will be subject to further threats because of their dependence on host plants. We investigated the impact of climate change on the distribution of Italian high‐altitude longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae) using a maximum entropy approach based on bioclimatic variables. We used 510 presence records for 15 species distributed throughout the Italian Alps and Apennines. Then, we combined climate‐based predictions with vegetation data to predict the future changes in the extent of suitable areas. All species but two will move uphill to track suitable climates and will face a range contraction (with an average loss of 44%) under both climatic change scenarios considered. Suitable vegetation covers, on average, only 56% of the estimated current species ranges, which means that the future distribution will be even more limited. Given the importance of Italian mountains as hubs of diversity in the Mediterranean hotspot, these results are particularly alarming. Conservation actions that can mitigate the effects of climate change on high‐altitude cerambycids should be focused on contrasting habitat loss and degradation through land preservation and the adoption of appropriate forest management practices.
Camouflage and warning signals are contrasted prey strategies reducing predator attack, which offer an excellent opportunity to study the evolutionary forces acting on prey appearance. Edible prey are often inconspicuous and escape predation by remaining undetected. Predators learn to find the most common ones, leading to apostatic selection (advantage to rare morphs) enhancing variation in cryptic prey. By contrast, defended prey are often conspicuous and escape predation by using warning colorations identifying them as unprofitable. Predators avoid the ones they are most familiar with, leading to positive frequency-dependence and warning signal uniformity. It is less clear, however, what happens when two morphs of the same species vary strongly in conspicuousness, and how to explain the maintenance of cryptic and conspicuous morphs within populations, in the case of profitable prey. Using the white and melanic morphs of the invasive Box Tree Moth (Cydalima perspectalis) presented at three different frequencies, we investigate whether a) caterpillars and adult moths are palatable for birds, b) the less conspicuous, melanic morph experiences lower predation rates and b) whether frequency-dependence balances morph frequencies. Our results suggest that the melanic morph enjoys a survival advantage owing to a lower visibility. However, our experiments show that, unexpectedly, the two color morphs experience opposite patterns of frequency-dependent predation, despite being both fully palatable to birds. The melanic morph is under apostatic selection, whereas the conspicuous, white morph is subject to positive frequency-dependence (safety in numbers). Our experiments also show some level of unpalatability in the caterpillars. These results offer novel insight into how predation triggers contrasting evolutionary patterns in a palatable, polymorphic species within two morphs that differ markedly in conspicuousness and within two different life stages.
New data on the beetle fauna of the Abruzzi region (Central Italy) are presented. New data on ecology and distribution are provided for three species of Cerambycidae previously recorded for the region and three species (one Cerambycidae and two Scarabaeoidea) are recorder for the first time for the region: Agapanthia (Epoptes) cynarae (Germar, 1817), Copris hispanus cavolinii (Petagna, 1792), Triodontella nitidula (Rossi, 1790).
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