“…Boll weevils have long been assumed to feed solely on pollen of certain malvaceous plants (Burke & Earle, 1965;Cate & Skinner, 1978), and later, pollens of other plants were recognized (Jones et al, 1992(Jones et al, , 1993Hardee et al, 1999), but recent research has revealed that adult boll weevils can consume cotton leaves and bracts, citrus and cactus fruit, and likely nectar (Showler & Abrigo, 2007;Showler, 2009b). In the subtropics, adult boll weevils can survive and reproduce during the winter on small patches of volunteer cotton that, despite surveillance, are overlooked, and adults can be trapped in substantial numbers around grapefruit, Citrus paradisi Macfad., and orange, C. sinensis (L.) Osbeck., orchards (Showler, 2006b). The edible endocarps of grapefruits and oranges of those citrus species can sustain up to 25% of adult boll weevils in nonreproductive condition for longer than five months (completing the cotton-free period); the maximum longevity (246 days) was only seven days less than boll weevils fed large cotton squares (Showler & Abrigo, 2007).…”