Statewide Survey of Imported Fire Ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Populations in Tennessee

作者: Jason B. Oliver , Robert K. Vander Meer , Samuel A. Ochieng , Nadeer N. Youssef , Eva Pantaleoni

DOI: 10.18474/0749-8004-44.2.149

关键词:

摘要: Imported fire ants (Solenopsis spp.; Hymenoptera: Formicidae) occupy 54 counties (~5.4 million ha) in Tennessee. To better understand the fire ant species distribution in Tennessee, the state was divided into 16.1 × 16.1 km grids, and a single colony was sampled for cuticular hydrocarbon and venom alkaloid analyses within each grid. A total of 387 samples was processed from which 9 (2.3%), 167 (43.2%), and 211 (54.5%) were identified as red (Solenopsis invicta Buren), black (Solenopsis richteri Forel), or hybrid (S. invicta × S. richteri) imported fire ants, respectively. The S. invicta was only found near metropolitan Nashville in Davidson and Williamson counties and at one site in Decatur Co. All samples east of Franklin Co. were identified as hybrids. Tennessee counties west of Lincoln were predominantly S. richteri (86.5%) as opposed to hybrid (13.0%) and S. invicta (0.5%). The exception was Hardin Co., which was predominantly hybrid. Counties containing both hybrid and S. richteri (all in the middle and western part of the state) included Bedford, Decatur, Franklin, Giles, Hardeman, Hardin, Haywood, Lawrence, Lincoln, Marshall, Maury, McNairy, Perry, and Wayne. The S. invicta samples collected from one Williamson Co. site were determined to be polygyne and infected with the Solenopsis invicta virus (genotype SINV-1 A). This was the first detection of polygyne imported fire ant in Tennessee. The SINV-1 A virus was also a new find at the time of detection, but has been previously reported. The survey results are being used to direct current and future biological control efforts against imported fire ants in Tennessee.

参考文章(23)
Wayne A. Gardner, Stan Diffie, Robert K. Vander Meer, Mark A. Brinkman, Distribution of the Fire Ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Hybrid in Georgia Journal of Entomological Science. ,vol. 43, pp. 133- 137 ,(2008) , 10.18474/0749-8004-43.1.133
Steven M. Valles, Charles A. Strong, David H. Oi, Sanford D. Porter, Roberto M. Pereira, Robert K. Vander Meer, Yoshifumi Hashimoto, Linda M. Hooper-Bùi, Hussein Sánchez-Arroyo, Tim Davis, Vedham Karpakakunjaram, Karen M. Vail, L.C. “Fudd” Graham, Juan A. Briano, Luis A. Calcaterra, Lawrence E. Gilbert, Rufina Ward, Kenneth Ward, Jason B. Oliver, Glenn Taniguchi, David C. Thompson, Phenology, distribution, and host specificity of Solenopsis invicta virus-1. Journal of Invertebrate Pathology. ,vol. 96, pp. 18- 27 ,(2007) , 10.1016/J.JIP.2007.02.006
Sanford D. Porter, Awinash Bhatkar, Roger Mulder, Bradleigh S. Vinson, Daniel J. Clair, Distribution and Density of Polygyne Fire Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in Texas Journal of Economic Entomology. ,vol. 84, pp. 866- 874 ,(1991) , 10.1093/JEE/84.3.866
Daniel P. Wojcik, Craig R. Allen, Richard J. Brenner, Elizabeth A. Forys, Donald P. Jouvenaz, R. Scott Lutz, Red Imported Fire Ants: Impact on Biodiversity American Entomologist. ,vol. 47, pp. 16- 23 ,(2001) , 10.1093/AE/47.1.16
MATTHEW ORR, SERGIO SEIKE, LAWRENCE GILBERT, Foraging ecology and patterns of diversification in dipteran parasitoids of fire ants in south Brazil Ecological Entomology. ,vol. 22, pp. 305- 314 ,(1997) , 10.1046/J.1365-2311.1997.00072.X
Robert K. vander Meer, Clifford S. Lofgren, Biochemical and behavioral evidence foe hybridization between fire ants,Solenopsis invicta andSolenopsis richteri (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Journal of Chemical Ecology. ,vol. 15, pp. 1757- 1765 ,(1989) , 10.1007/BF01012263
Thomas E. Macom, Sanford D. Porter, Comparison of Polygyne and Monogyne Red Imported Fire Ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Population Densities Annals of the Entomological Society of America. ,vol. 89, pp. 535- 543 ,(1996) , 10.1093/AESA/89.4.535