Difference between revisions of "Xylosandrus compactus"

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[[File:Xylosandrus_compactus_IPM5209014.jpg|250px|thumb|''Xylosandrus compactus'' (click on image to enlarge it)<br/>Author(s): Natasha Wright, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services<br/>Source: [http://www.ipmimages.org/browse/detail.cfm?imgnum=5209014 IPM Images]]]
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[[File:Xylosandrus_compactus_IPM5209014.jpg|200px|thumb|''Xylosandrus compactus'' (click on image to enlarge it)<br/>Author(s): Natasha Wright, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services<br/>Source: [http://www.ipmimages.org/browse/detail.cfm?imgnum=5209014 IPM Images]]]
<font color="#800000">'''''Xylosandrus compactus'''''</font> (Eichhoff, 1875) - (coffee twig borer)
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<font color="#800000">'''''Xylosandrus compactus'''''</font> (Eichhoff, 1875) - (coffee twig borer, or black coffee twig borer)
  
The beetles is native to south-east Asia but is now widely distributed. It breeds in the branches of various trees (e.g. coffee or cacao), resulting in death of the twigs. Only the females attack trees and the males are flightless. The life cycle lasts around one months. The adult female is around 1½-2 mm long and shiny black. The males are smaller and light brown.
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This beetle is native to south-east Asia but is now widely distributed. It breeds in the branches of various trees (e.g. coffee or cacao), resulting in death of the twigs. In Uganda, the beetle was first recorded in 1993 and has spread quickly through the country, infesting mainly coffee plantations. Surveys between 2010 and 2015 found around 40% of the coffee trees infested, resulting in an estimated annual export loss of about US$ 40 millions ([[Agricultural and Forest Entomology (2018) 20, 327-333|Bukomeko et al., 2018]]).
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The recommended control methods of removing and burning infested twigs are very labour-intensive. Only the females attack trees and the males are flightless. The life cycle lasts around one months. The adult female is around 1½-2 mm long and shiny black. The males are smaller and light brown.
 
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For reviwes see [[Journal of Integrated Pest Management (2015) 6 (1 - 7), 1-8|Greco and Wright, 2015]] and the respective page in [http://wiki.bugwood.org/Xylosandrus_compactus BugwoodWiki].
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For reviews see [[Journal of Integrated Pest Management (2015) 6 (1 - 7), 1-8|Greco and Wright, 2015]] and the respective page in [[bugwood:Xylosandrus_compactus|BugwoodWiki]].
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Latest revision as of 07:15, 22 October 2018


Literature database
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Xylosandrus compactus (click on image to enlarge it)
Author(s): Natasha Wright, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
Source: IPM Images

Xylosandrus compactus (Eichhoff, 1875) - (coffee twig borer, or black coffee twig borer)

This beetle is native to south-east Asia but is now widely distributed. It breeds in the branches of various trees (e.g. coffee or cacao), resulting in death of the twigs. In Uganda, the beetle was first recorded in 1993 and has spread quickly through the country, infesting mainly coffee plantations. Surveys between 2010 and 2015 found around 40% of the coffee trees infested, resulting in an estimated annual export loss of about US$ 40 millions (Bukomeko et al., 2018).

The recommended control methods of removing and burning infested twigs are very labour-intensive. Only the females attack trees and the males are flightless. The life cycle lasts around one months. The adult female is around 1½-2 mm long and shiny black. The males are smaller and light brown.

Vernacular names
• Deutsch: schwarzer Kaffeezweigbohrer
• English: coffee twig borer
black coffee borer
• Français: scolyte des rameaux du caféier


For reviews see Greco and Wright, 2015 and the respective page in BugwoodWiki.