Brassica-pest

Guides

  • Aleochara

    Aleochara is a genus of rove beetles (Staphylinidae) distinguished by its parasitoid larval life history. Adults are predatory, feeding on eggs, larvae, and puparia of scatophagous and necrophagous Diptera. Larvae are ectoparasitoids that develop inside fly puparia, killing the host. The genus contains at least 150 and possibly more than 400 species across 16 subgenera, with a worldwide distribution except Antarctica. Several species, notably Aleochara bilineata, are significant biological control agents of agricultural pest flies.

  • Hellula

    cabbage webworm, cabbage centre grub, cabbage budworm moth

    Hellula is a genus of moths in the family Crambidae, established by Achille Guenée in 1854. The genus includes approximately ten described species distributed worldwide in warm regions. Several species are significant agricultural pests, particularly of brassica crops. The most economically important species, Hellula undalis (cabbage webworm) and H. hydralis (cabbage centre grub), cause substantial damage to cabbage and related crops through larval feeding on stems and leaves.

  • Phyllotreta pusilla

    Western Black Flea Beetle

    Phyllotreta pusilla, commonly known as the western black flea beetle, is a flea beetle species in the family Chrysomelidae. It is distributed across Central America and North America, with documented presence in regions including Alberta, Canada and Colorado, USA. The species is recognized as an agricultural pest of canola and mustard crops, where it causes plant injury through feeding damage. Research has identified significant variation in host plant susceptibility among different canola and mustard varieties.

  • Scaptomyza flava

    European leaf miner, yellow scaptomyza

    Scaptomyza flava is an obligate herbivorous leaf-mining fly in the family Drosophilidae, representing an evolutionary transition to herbivory from the ancestral microbe-feeding habit of drosophilids. Adults are 2.5 mm in length and amber to dark brown in color. The species is native to the Palearctic region with a Holarctic distribution across Europe, Asia, and North America, and has been introduced to New Zealand and Australia where it is a significant agricultural pest of Brassicales crops. Larvae feed internally on leaf mesophyll, creating serpentine mines that mature into blotches. The species is unusual among Drosophilidae in having lost yeast-associated odorant receptors and evolved specialized detoxification mechanisms for mustard oils. It is being developed as a model organism for studying plant-herbivore interactions.