Otiorhynchus Auropunctatus
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Otiorhynchus Auropunctatus
''Otiorhynchus'' (sometimes misspelled as ''Otiorrhynchus'') is a large genus of weevils in the family Curculionidae. Many species of the genus, particularly the black vine weevil (''O. sulcatus'') and the Otiorhynchus ovatus, strawberry root weevil (''O. ovatus''), are important pest (organism), pests, both as larvae and as adults. Larvae feed on plant roots. Adults are flightless with fused elytra and feed at night on plant foliage.Warner, R. E. & F. B. Negley. 1976. The genus ''Otiorhynchus'' in America north of Mexico (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). ''Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington'' 78 (3): 240-262.Bright, D. E. & P. Bouchard. ''The Insects and Arachnids of Canada'', Part 25: ''Coleoptera. Curculionidae. Entiminae. Weevils of Canada and Alaska''. Vol. 2. Ottawa, NRC Research Press, 2008. . P. 111-131. In many species of the genus at least some race (biology), races are polyploid and parthenogenetic, while the rest of the races and species are diploid and b ...
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Otiorhynchus Sulcatus
Black vine weevil (''Otiorhynchus sulcatus'') is an insect native to Europe but common in North America as well. It is a pest of many garden plants. Overview The adult weevil is matte black with fused wing covers, and is unable to fly. It feeds at night on the outer edges of leaves, causing the leaves to have a notched margin. Broadleaved evergreen plants such as ''Camellia'', ''Rhododendron'', ''Euonymus'' and ''Bergenia'' are particularly prone to damage, although a wide range of different garden plants is susceptible to attack. Female weevils have the ability to reproduce parthenogenetically with fertilisation of eggs required to produce males, though no males have been observed. This form of parthenogenesis is known as thelytoky. Grubs grow up to 1 cm in length, have a slightly curved, legless body, creamy-white in colour, with a tan-brown head. They live below the soil surface, and feed on roots and cambium at the base of the trunk. They cause most damage to herbaceous ...
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