Brachycaudus helichrysi

Brachycaudus helichrysi is a species of aphid first described by the German naturalist Johann Heinrich Kaltenbach in 1843.[2] Its common names include leaf curl plum aphid,[3] and leaf-curling plum aphid, and it is a serious pest of plum and damson trees.[4]

Brachycaudus helichrysi
Scientific classification
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B. helichrysi
Binomial name
Brachycaudus helichrysi

Description

The viviparous wingless females have an oval or pear-shaped body and grow to a length of up to 2 mm (0.08 in). Early in the season they are brownish but later they are yellowish-green. The antennae are pale green and short, about half the length of the body. There is no dark, shining patch on the dorsal surface of the abdomen, a fact which distinguishes it from the otherwise similar thistle aphid (Brachycaudus cardui). The cauda (tail-like elongation) is bluntly rounded, the legs are pale except for the extremities, and the cornicles are pale-coloured, short and flanged.[4][5] Winged females range from 1.3 to 1.8 mm (0.05 to 0.07 in) in length and have a blackish head with longer antennae, blackish thorax and a green abdomen with dark spots on the third to sixth segments. The overwintering eggs are black.[5]

Biology

Brachycaudus helichrysi overwinters as fertilised eggs which hatch during the winter or early spring, before the plum and damson trees on which they are laid come into leaf. The fundatrices (viviparous parthenogenetic females produced on the primary host) feed at first at the base of buds but as the buds begin to expand, they move on to softer tissues, and later on to the new shoots and underside of the foliage. By May, some winged forms are beginning to appear and these fly to secondary hosts, such as Asteraceae, Chrysanthemum and Trifolium, where they found new colonies. The colonies on the primary host gradually die out. Further generations develop on the secondary hosts and in the autumn, winged forms fly back to the primary host. Here sexual forms develop, mating takes place and eggs are laid on twigs and spurs of the plum and damson trees.[4] Natural enemies include ladybirds, lacewings, soldier beetles and hoverflies.[3]

Damage

Brachycaudus helichrysi is a serious pest of stone fruits. It forms dense colonies on the underside of the leaves of the primary host causing curling,[3] twisting and distortion of the foliage, the shedding of flowers and the dropping of young fruit.[6] It is one of several species of aphid that can transmit the virus that causes plum pox.[6]

gollark: Actually, this factoid does seem kind of dubious even if it's meant to say "mass"... hmm.
gollark: I mean, the atmosphere isn't very dense.
gollark: It *might* be possible to make it somehow, but it wouldn't *weigh* the same as it somehow could on Earth.
gollark: That's not really valid in the context of the entire observable universe.
gollark: *Weight* is mass times acceleration from gravity. The acceleration from gravity is probably going to change wildly across the whole observable universe, but I guess you could sample it at various bits and average it. In any case, that average acceleration probably won't be at the Earth level of 10-ish m/s².

References

  1. "ITIS standard report - Brachycaudus helichrysi (Kaltenbach, 1843)". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  2. "Brachycaudus helichrysi (Kaltenbach, 1843)". Global Biodiversity Information Facility. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  3. "UC IPM - Leaf Curl Plum Aphid". University of California, Davis. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  4. Alford, David V. (17 July 2014). Pests of Fruit Crops: A Colour Handbook, Second Edition. CRC Press. pp. 74–75. ISBN 978-1-4822-5421-1.
  5. Berim, M.N. "Pests: Brachycaudus helichrysi Kalt. - Leafcurl Plum Aphid". AgroAtlas. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  6. Van Emden, Helmut Fritz; Harrington, Richard (2007). Aphids as Crop Pests. CABI. p. 658. ISBN 978-0-85199-819-0.
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