Long-lived-adult
Guides
Ischnura denticollis
Black-fronted Forktail
Ischnura denticollis, commonly known as the Black-fronted Forktail, is a small damselfly in the family Coenagrionidae. It is a western North American species with an exceptionally long adult lifespan for a damselfly, persisting up to six weeks. The species is notable for its distinctive lack of pale thoracic markings, which separates it from most other forktails. It occupies a variety of aquatic habitats including springs, ponds with emergent vegetation, and slow-moving stream sections.
Lobiopa insularis
strawberry sap beetle
Lobiopa insularis is a sap-feeding beetle in the family Nitidulidae, widely distributed across the Americas from North America through Central America to South America and the Caribbean. It is a significant agricultural pest of strawberry and other soft fruits, causing direct feeding damage and indirect losses through fungal dispersal. The species has been extensively studied for its biology, life history, and control options, including biological control using parasitoids and entomopathogenic nematodes.
agricultural-pestsap-beetlestrawberry-pestbiological-controlNitidulidaefrugivoroussexual-dimorphismmate-guardingparasitoid-hostentomopathogenic-nematode-hostpolyphagousfungal-dispersal-agentoverwintering-adultlong-lived-adulthigh-fecunditysoil-ovipositionripening-fruit-attractionintegrated-pest-managementBrazilArgentinaAmericas-distributionPachylobius picivorus
pitch-eating weevil, pitch eating weevil
Pachylobius picivorus, commonly known as the pitch-eating weevil, is a pine root-feeding weevil native to North America. The species is an economically significant pest of natural and planted pine seedlings, with brood development requiring 100–128 days during summer. Adults are long-lived and oviposit continuously at approximately 0.7 eggs per day per female throughout their lifespan. Populations exhibit two annual peaks in the Georgia Piedmont, driven by temperature and developmental cycles. Behavioral studies indicate the species responds strongly to olfactory cues, particularly ethanol and turpentine mixtures, though visual cues are less important for host location than in related species such as Hylobius pales.
pine-weevilroot-feeding-weevilforestry-pestPinus-pestCurculionidaeNorth-AmericaGeorgia-Piedmonttrap-response-behaviorethanol-turpentine-responsepine-seedling-damagelong-lived-adultcontinuous-ovipositionpopulation-peakssummer-brood-developmentolfactory-cue-responsevisual-cue-secondaryTedders-trapmodified-Tilles-trapeconomic-pestforest-regeneration-pestlarval-root-feedingpine-plantation-pestbehavioral-ecologyhost-finding-behaviorground-dwelling-weevilPachylobiusMolytinaePissodini