Leptocybe

Leptocybe
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Suborder: Apocrita
Superfamily: Chalcidoidea
Family: Eulophidae
Genus: Leptocybe
Fisher & La Salle, 2004
Species: L. invasa
Binomial name
Leptocybe invasa
Fisher & La Salle, 2004

Leptocybe is a monotypic genus of insects in the superfamily Chalcidoidea, the chalcid wasps. It contains the single species Leptocybe invasa, which is known by the common name blue gum chalcid.[1][2]

Developing galls

This chalcid was discovered in 2000 when river red gums (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) in the Middle East and Mediterranean began developing disfiguring galls. The damage became severe enough to cause crop losses in tree plantations. Galls were collected and a previously undescribed species of chalcid wasp emerged. In 2004 it was described to science as Leptocybe invasa.[3]

This tiny wasp is just over one millimeter in length. Its body is brown with a slight blue to green iridescence. Parts of the legs are yellowish in color.[3]

The adult female injects a neat line of minute eggs in the epidermis of new leaf buds on eucalyptus trees. The leaf tissue may exude a whitish sap, which covers the oviposition site. Heavy wasp infestations can kill new buds on the trees. If the bud survives it develops a layer of corky tissue within one to two weeks of oviposition. This corky scar widens and becomes glossy in texture. It turns from green to pinkish to dark pink or red in color. It loses its glossy texture and turns dull brown or reddish. The chalcid wasp larva develops inside the gall and when it emerges as an adult insect the gall is spherical and up to 2.7 millimeters wide. During an infestation there are usually 3 to 6 galls per leaf, but up to 65 have been observed on a single leaf.[3]

Several eucalyptus species are susceptible to the wasp. Host species include bangalay (Eucalyptus botryoides), apple box (E. bridgesiana), Tasmanian blue gum (E. globulus), cider gum (E. gunnii), flooded gum (E. grandis), swamp mahogany (E. robusta), Sydney blue gum (E. saligna), forest red gum (E. tereticornis), and manna gum (E. viminalis).[3]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leptocybe.
  1. Leptocybe invasa. FAO Forest Pest Species Profiles. August 2012.
  2. Blue Gum Chalcid. Pest Fact Sheet. Asia-Pacific Forest Invasive Species Network.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Mendel, Z., et al. (2004). Taxonomy and biology of Leptocybe invasa gen. & sp. n. (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae), an invasive gall inducer on Eucalyptus. Australian Journal of Entomology 43 101-13.
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