
Melaleuca currently infests approximately 200,000 ha of wetland ecosystems in this region, most notably the sawgrass marshes that comprise the Florida Everglades. Chemical, mechanical and cultural control practices have been used to manage melaleuca in south Florida. However, these methods can be expensive, are ecologically disruptive, and provide only temporary control of this highly invasive plant. Melaleuca is not considered a weed in Australia because a complex of natural enemies that do not occur in Florida attacks it in its native range. Classical biological control, or the introduction of host specific natural enemies into Florida from Australia, is being investigated as a possible long-term solution to the melaleuca problem. Four insects were imported into quarantine for host specificity testing by USDA/UF scientists. One of these insects is the melaleuca snout beetle or weevil Oxyops vitiosa.
Egg: The eggs of the melaleuca weevil are yellow, 1mm long and resemble gel capsules. The female almost always covers the eggs in a secretion as soon as they are deposited to protect them from desiccation or predation. This secretion dries to form a hard protective casing, which is brown to black in color. When the eggs are present, they are usually associated with adult feeding damage.
Larva: The larval stage has four instars, or growth phases. The appearance and size of the larvae vary depending upon their age. Neonates, or newly hatched larvae, are yellow and less than 1 mm long. In contrast, the mature larvae are 14 mm in length, grayish in color and are slug-like in appearance. Developing larvae are usually covered with translucent yellow or orange oily secretion that turns black after fecal material is incorporated into it. This oily secretion mixed with fecal matter affords the larvae protection from fire ants and possibly other predators. Larvae produce a long thin coil of feces.
The feeding damage produced by the larval stage is very different from the adults. Instead of chewing holes in the leaves, the larvae consume all layers of the leaf except for the cuticle on the opposite side. The appearance of the paper-thin feeding trails in the leaves produced by the developing larvae is a clear indication that melaleuca weevils are present. Prior to pupation, the mature larvae, or prepupae, cease feeding and are yellow in color.
larval damage on melaleuca leaf
Pupa: The pupal stage is not visible because it occurs beneath the soil surface. Larvae develop to the pupal stage inside an earthen capsule formed by the prepupae. The pupal capsule, which is made of soil and an oily secretion produced by the insect, is approximately 10 mm in diameter. The newly formed pupae are of the exarate type (i.e., the legs and wings are free and not glued to the body), and are yellowish in color but turn brown prior to emergence of the adults from the soil.
As mentioned previously, part of the life cycle of the melaleuca weevil occurs in the soil. While soil type does not appear to preclude establishment, pupation success may be higher at sites with sandy soils. Field and laboratory studies indicate the larvae can pupate under soil conditions ranging from saturated to drier areas with a high relative humidity. However, habitats in south Florida that are characterized by infrequent flooding, moderate melaleuca densities, and dry winters favor weevil establishment. Failure of the weevil to establish at permanently flooded sites suggests these conditions are not conducive to normal pupation, probably because submersed pupae cannot survive without oxygen for any length of time
Larvae are commonly observed on melaleuca plants in south Florida from October to May, which coincides with flushes of new leaf growth. Adults are present only during the summer months unless the melaleuca is mowed or otherwise damaged. Any activity that stimulates new leaf growth (e.g., shoot regrowth from cut stumps, damaged branches, root suckering, etc.) will support larval populations year-round at a specific site.
Because the insect disperses slowly, a coordinated redistribution program is needed to establish the insect in all 22 counties in central and south Florida infested with melaleuca. A standardized procedure for collecting and transporting the adult melaleuca weevils to other sites where the weevil is not yet established has been developed and implemented in St. Lucie County.
Authors: J. P. Cuda, S.A. Wineriter, G.R. Buckingham, T.D. Center, and K.T. Gioeli
Photographs: K. Gioeli, L. Buss, R. Lowen and V. Ramey, University of Florida; G. Buckingham USDA;
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-211
Publication Date: May 2001. Latest revision: July 2004.
Copyright 2001-2004 University of Florida
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Department of Entomology and Nematology
Division of Plant Industry
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