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Blissus minutus (Blatchley) and Toonglasa umbrata (Distant): Seldom-collected native chinch bugs (Hemiptera: Lygaeoidea: Blissidae) as colonists of the African bunchgrass Eragrostis curvula, and their association with other grasses in the Southern United PDF

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Preview Blissus minutus (Blatchley) and Toonglasa umbrata (Distant): Seldom-collected native chinch bugs (Hemiptera: Lygaeoidea: Blissidae) as colonists of the African bunchgrass Eragrostis curvula, and their association with other grasses in the Southern United

PROC. ENTOMOL. SOC. WASH. 107(2), 2005, pp. 336-345 BLISSUS MINUTUS (BLATCHLEY) AND TOONGLASA UMBRATA (DISTANT): SELDOM-COLLECTED NATIVE CHINCH BUGS (HEMIPTERA: LYGAEOIDEA: BLISSIDAE) AS COLONISTS OF THE AFRICAN BUNCHGRASS ERAGROSTIS CURVULA, AND THEIR ASSOCIATION WITH OTHER GRASSES IN THE SOUTHERN UNITED STATES A. G. Wheeler, Jr. Department of Entomology, Soils, and Plant Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634-0315, U.S.A. (e-mail: awhlr(2)clemson.edu) — Abstract. Weeping lovegrass {Eragrostis curvula; Poaceae), an African bunchgrass first introduced into the United States in the late 1920s, has acquired a diverse insect fauna in the southern states. Among the little-known native species that have colonized this chloridoid grass are the chinch bugs Blissus minutus (Blatchley) and Toonglasa um- brata (Distant). Known previously only from Florida, B. minutus is reported for the first time from Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Texas. This multivoltine grass generalist was collected most often on E. curvula (293 collections). Adults were found on 34 grasses of the subfamilies Aristoideae, Chloridoideae, and Pan- icoideae, with nymphs observed on 21 species, mainly chloridoids and panicoids. Toon- glasa umbrata was collected in Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas from seven native grasses and one introduced grass, in addition to weeping lovegrass (subfamilies Chlori- doideae, Panicoideae, and Pooideae). It was syntopic with B. minutus on E. curvula in parts of Oklahoma and Texas and was the only blissid found on weeping lovegrass in more arid regions (Arizona, New Mexico, and western Texas). Key Words: Insecta, Lygaeoidea, chinch bugs, weeping lovegrass, Poaceae, host expan- sion, novel hosts Weeping lovegrass, Eragrostis curvula sociated with weeping lovegrass (Wheeler (Schrad.) Nees (Poaceae), is an African 1999, 2003; Wilson and Wheeler, in press) bunchgrass that was obtained in the late are the chinch bugs Blissus minutus 1920s and tested in the mid-1930s for in- (Blatchley) and Toonglasa umbrata (Dis- troduction into the southwestern United tant). States to help reclaim rangelands depleted I first found B. minutus (May 1996) in by years ofdrought and overgrazing (Crider crowns of a native grass. Andropogon vir- 1945). It began to be planted in southeast- ginicus L., in Georgia but discovered that ern states, mainly for erosion control along the blissid could be detected more easily by highways, in the 1940s and 1950s (Wheeler sampling weeping lovegrass, especially in 1999). Numerous native insects have colo- or near the fall-line Sandhills from southern nized this exotic grass, especially hemipter- North Carolina to eastern Alabama. Era- ans that develop within the extensive grostis curvula thus was used as an "indi- crowns. Among the little-known native in- cator" plant for my attempt to delimit the sects that make up the cryptic diversity as- southeastern distribution of a species VOLUME NUMBER 107, 2 337 known previously only from Florida. I also Although "chinch bugs" sometimes is sampled native grasses to elucidate host- reserved for species of the genus Blissus, I plant relationships for a blissid whose use this common name in a broad sense nymphal hosts were unknown. Southwest- (e.g.. Slater and Wilcox 1973, Slater 1976) ern states were included in my survey after to refer to members of the Blissidae (for- B. mimitus (1999) and T. wnbrata (2000) merly the lygaeid subfamily Blissinae; see were found on weeping lovegrass in Henry 1997). The names and subfamilies of Oklahoma. Herein I summarize the distri- grasses follow Soreng et al. (2004). bution records obtained from surveys of B. minutus in southern states and T. wnbrata Blissus minutus Blatchley in the Southwest, record the native and non- Blissus minutus was described from Dun- native grasses that serve as hosts ofthe blis- edin (Pinellas County). Florida, by Blatch- sids, and provide notes on their seasonal ley (1925a) as Isclmoclennis pusillus and histories. was renamed /. minutus because ol" primary homonymy (Blatchley 1925b). Leonard Materials and Methods (1968) transferred the species to Blissus Blissus minutus was sampled by holding Burmeister. All additional published re- a white enamel pan at the base of weeping cords ofB. minutus are from Florida: Royal lovegrass and other potential hosts, striking Palm Park [Miami-Dade Co.] (Blatchley the crown with an ax handle, and noting the 1926); Bahia Honda Key [Monroe Co.] presence of dislodged nymphs and adults (Leonard 1968); and Broward. Franklin. (brachypters and macropters). Specimens Hillsborough, Levy, Palm Beach, Pasco. St. were collected from nearly every site Lucie, and Volusia counties (Slater and (>90%) and deposited in the National Mu- Baranowski 1990). Previous ecological in- seum of Natural History, Smithsonian In- formation consists only of the collection of stitution, Washington, D.C. (USNM). In the adults from "grass tufts" (Blatchley 1925a, Southeast, nymphs were recorded as early 1926) and sea oats, Uniola paniculata L. (I-III) or late (IV-V) instars (1996-1999) (Poaceae) (Leonard 1968). Slater (1976) or were sorted to instar in the field (2000- noted that the blissid "breeds" on sea oats 2004). In the Southwest, T. wnbrata was and attributed the information to Leonard collected during surveys for B. minutus. (1968); that paper, however, mentioned Adults (only nymphs were present at cer- only the collection of ad—ults. tain sites) of T. wnbrata from each locality Distribution (Fig. 1 ). Known previous- were collected and deposited in the USNM; ly only from 1 1 counties in Florida (Slater when nymphs were present, instars were and Baranowski 1990), B. minutus is now field sorted and recorded. known in the southeastern United States Notes on the seasonality of B. minutus from Alabama (1 county), Georgia (68). are based mainly on the sampling of weep- North Carolina (15). and South Carolina ing lovegrass in South Carolina in Richland (24). Records also are available for fourteen County near Spears Creek Church Rd.. 3.8 additional counties in Florida. Although km SSE of Pontiac (34°06.3'N. 80°49.5'W) Fig. 1 shows the distribution of B. minutus and in Florida in Lake County along Rt. 27, only by county, the blissid appearcti to he 8.5 km SSE of Clermont (28°28.7'N. restricted to the Sandhills ecoregion ofmost 81°43.0'W) and Polk County along Rl. 27. counties lying within both the Sandhills and 2.4 km N of jet. CR-54, 7.3 km NNW of Piedmont (e.g., Anson, Lee, and Montgom- Loughman (28°16.6'N, 81°39.6'W). Notes ery in North Carolina and Edgefield, Fair- on seasonality of B. minutus and T. wnbra- field, and Lancaster in South Carolina). ta in the Southwest are based on observa- Attempts to collect B. minutus in the tions only from lale April to early June. Piedmont of North Caiolina (m;iinl\ I'liion — PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON 338 Recordfromauthor'sfieldwork Recordfromliterature Recordfromauthor'sfieldworkandliterature Fig. I. Known distribution (by county) ofBlissus minutus based on personal collecting and the literature. County) were unsuccessful. The only Pied- in the tall-grass prairies and mixed-grass mont record in South Carolina was from plains in 16 counties of western Oklahoma. southern McCormick County near the fall It was not found in sandhills ofsoutheastern line. My sampling of weeping lovegrass at Oklahoma (southern Atoka County) despite multiple sites in Abbeville, Anderson, the sampling of weeping lovegrass in April Chester, Greenwood, Newberry, Oconee, or May of each year from 2000 to 2003. Pickens, and York counties in South Caro- The blissid was found in Texas (14 coun- lina was negative for the blissid. Records ties) in or near the panhandle in the Rolling from the Piedmont of Georgia were mainly Plains and High Plains, as well as three from counties near the fall line; extensive counties in the Edwards Plateau. It was col- sampling of weeping lovegrass failed to lected as far west as Dawson, Gaines, and yield specimens in more northern Piedmont Terry counties, where it was syntopic with counties: Hart, Jackson, Madison, Morgan, T. umbrata, but was not found in other Oconee, Taliaferro, and Wilkes. An excep- western counties (Bailey, Cochran, and tion to the bug's collection from more Yoakum). southern Piedmont counties in Georgia is Host plants. Blissus minutus was col- the record from Atlanta (Cobb County). lected more often (293 records) on weeping In Alabama, B. minutus was found at lovegrass (Eragrostis curvula), the princi- three sites near Cottonton (Russell County) pal plant used to obtain distribution records, in sandy areas of the East Gulf Coastal than on any other host (Tables 1-2). Other Plain. I did not find it during sampling of chloridoid grasses that served as hosts in- weeping lovegrass in adjacent Lee and Ma- cluded two native species ofEragrostis and con counties to the north and west, respec- an adventive species ofthe genus {E. pilosa tively. The blissid is generally distributed in (L.) P. Beauv.). Among native grasses, peninsular Florida and is known from two broomsedge {Andropogon virginicus L.), a counties in the panhandle. panicoid, accounted for the largest number In the Southwest, I collected B. minutus of records (39; Table 1). VOLUME NUMBER 107, 2 339 Table 1. Number of collections of Blissus minutus from grasses in the southeastern United States: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina; four collections from Eragrostis ciirvula in Russell County. Al- abama, are not listed. Species marked with an asterisk are ones from which nymphs were collected. (iA NC Aristoideae Aristida beyrichiana Trin. & Rupr. *-A. condensala Chapn. 1 *A. purpurascens Poir. 1 '*A. tuberculosa Nutt. Chloridoideae Cynodon dactylon (L.) Pers. 2 '*Eragrostis curvula (Schrad.) Nees 17 98 49 83 E. elliottii S. Wats. —1 *E. hirsuta (Michx.) Nees — 1 *E. pilosa (L.) P. Beauv. — *E. refracta (Muhl. ex Elliott) Scribn. 2 *Muhlenbergia capillaris (Lam.) Trin. [including M. capillaris var.filipes (M. A. Curtis)] 7 2 *M. expansa (Poir.) Trin. 1 Spartina bakeri Merr. 2 Triplasis americana P. Beauv. 1 Panicoideae *Andropogonfloridamis Scribn. 1 A. glaucopsis (Elliott) Steud. 1 A. glomeratus (Walter) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb. 3 A. gyrans Ashe 1 *A. tenuispatheus (Nash) Nash —1 *A. ternarius Michx. 2 *A. virginicus L. 1—2 22 *Cenchrus carolinianus Hitch. C. echinatus L. 1 *Dichanthelium scabriusculum (Elliott) Gould & 1 C. A. Clark *Melinis repens (Willd.) Zizka 6 Panicum repens L. —1 *Paspalum notatum Fliigge var. saure Parodi — P. urvillei Steud. — Schizachyrium scopariiim (Michx.) Nash *'Sorghastrum domingensis (Trin.) Kunth 4 *S. nutans (L.) Nash 2 Adults ofB. minutus were collected from deae (24.3%) and Aristoideae (3.7%). If 34 species of Poaceae in the subfamilies only grasses on which nymphs were ob- Aristoideae, Chloridoideae, and Panicoi- served are considered, chloridoids account- deae. Nymphs were found on 21 species ed for 81.3% of total records; panicoids, representing each of the three subfamilies. 17.9%: and aristoids, 0.8%. With E. curvula Chloridoid (79.8%) and panicoid (19.2%) omitted, panicoids (78.2%) dominated the grasses dominated the collection records. nymphal iu^sts, tbllowed b\ chloridoids When records from the exotic E. curvula (18.4%) and ar—istoids (3.4%). are excluded, most records were from Pan- Seasonality. In the Southeast, aduhs of icoideae (72.0%), followed by Chloridoi- /). minutus (>95'7r hiach\ptcrs) were l\)und — 340 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON Table 2. Numberofcollections ofBUsslis ininutus from grasses in the southwestern United States: Oklahoma and Texas. Species marked with an asterisk are ones from which nymphs were collected. Chloridoideae *Erciiirostis ciirviila (Schrad.) Nees 30 16 Miihlenhergia liiulheinicri Hitchc. 3 M. reverchonii Vasey & Scribn. 1 Panicoideae *Bothriochloa ischaeiiniin (L.) Keng '''Scliizachyriuiii scopariuni (Michx.) Nash in crowns of weeping lovegrass from mid- pairs were observed in Wheeler County, November to mid-March. First through fifth Texas, on 26 April 2000. Collections in instars were observed in early December mid-May 2001, late May 2003, and early and third through fifth instars in late De- May 2004 consisted of brachypters (three cember (ca. 5% ofpopulation). That second macropters were seen). A mating pair was through fifth instars (mostly III-IV) were found on 25 May 2001 in Terry County, found in late February and early March Texas, and another on 29 May 2003 in suggests that nymphs survive the winter in Blaine County, Oklahoma. southeastern states. The irregularity of col- Toonglasa umbrata (Distant) lections and observations, coupled with the blissid's overwintering as adults and Toonglasa umbrata was described in Is- nymphs of several instars, made it difficult chnodemus Fieber from Guatemala by Dis- to determine the appearance of first instars tant (1893); it was transferred to Toonglasa of the first generation and delimit the num- Distant by Slater and Brailovsky (1983), ber of annual generations. Late-developing who proposed /. macer Van Duzee, de- cohorts of the first generation appeared to scribed from Arizona, as a synonym. Ad- overlap with nymphs of the second gener- ditional U.S. records are Iowa, Kansas, Ne- ation, which blurred the distinction between braska, New Mexico, Oregon, and Texas all succeeding generations. (Slater and Brailovsky 1983). The species Adults and a mating pair were observed ranges through Mexico and Central Amer- by late March; mating pairs continued to be ica to at least Brazil in South America (Slat- beaten from weeping lovegrass from April er and Brailovsky 1990). The grasses Ati- to late August. First and second instars out- dropogon glomeratus (Walter) Britton, & numbered late instars (presumably over- Sterns Poggenb. and Bothriochloa blad- wintered) at the Richland County sample hii (Retz.) S. T. Blake (= B. intermedia (R. site on 1 April 2000, suggesting the begin- Br.) A. Camus) are hosts of T. umbrata in ning of a first generation. Early instars also Panama (Slater 1976); a host in Mexico is were observed in late May, July, and Oc- Hyparrhenia rufa (Nees) Stapf (Slater and tober to December. This multivoltine blissid Brailovsky 1983). The fifth instar has been appears to complete at least three genera- described, based on material from Arizona tions a year in the Southeast. (Slater and Brailovsky 1983), but host In the Southwest, third through fifth in- grasses have not been reported for the Unit- stars (presumably overwintered), brachyp- ed States. ters, and an occasional macropter were pre- Distribution (Fig. 2). Toonglasa um- sent in late April 2000 and 2002. Mating brata was found in Arizona (1 county). VOLUME NUMBER 107, 2 341 Recordfromauthor'sfieldwork Recordfromliterature Recordfromauthor'sfieldworkandliterature Fig. 2. Knowndistribution (bycounty)ofToonglasa uinhratcibasedon personal collecting and the literature. New Mexico (6), Oklahoma (7), and Texas panicoid. and five chloridoid grasses (Table (11); Oklahoma is a new state record. It was 3), with records from the exotic chloridoid collected in western Oklahoma and Texas E. curx'ula dominating (8().()9f). Another in many ofthe counties and the same ecore- non-native host was a panictiid. the Old gions as B. rninutus. The two blissids were World bluestem Bothriochloii iscluwimiiu syntopic at ten sites in Oklahoma (Beck- (L.) Keng. Nymphs were found on sc\cn ham, Blaine, Canadian. Dewey, Jackson, native grasses, incltiding the chltMidoid Major, and Roger Mills counties) and nine sideoats grama (Bouicloiui lunipcinliila sites in Texas (Cottle, Dawson, Gaines. (Michx.) Torr.) and big sacatoii {Sporoholus Gray, Hardeman, Terry, and Wheeler coun- urightli Munroe ex Scribn.). ami the pani- ties). Toonglasa umhrata was the only blis- coids cane bluestem {Bofhrioch/od harhi- sid collected from crowns of bunchgrasses nodis (Lag.) Hertcr) aiul little bluestem in southeastern New Mexico and south- (Schizachyriuiu—scopariuin (Michx.) Nash). eastern Arizona—. Seas(Miality. Late-April collections in Host plants. Nymphs and adtihs ol" '/". 2()()() and 2002 ct)nsisicil kA' apparently umbrata were found on one pooitl. ihree overwintered third through lit'th instars 342 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON Table 3. Number ofcolleclions of Toonglasa umhrata from grasses in the southwestern United States: Ari- zona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Nymphs and adults were collected from all species. Chloridoideae Boiiteloita ciirtipendula (Michx.) Torr. 2 B. gracilis (Willd. ex Kunth) Lag. ex Griffiths 1 Eragrostis curvula (Schrad.) Nees 16 13 20 E. intermedia A. S. Hitch. Sporobolus wrightii Munro ex Scribn. Panicoideae Bothriochloa barbinodis (Lag.) Herter B. ischaemum (L.) Keng Schizachyrium scoparium (Michx.) Nash Pooideae Festuca arizonica Vasey (mostly IV-V) in western Oklahoma and Discussion fourth and fifth instars in western Texas. Because B. minutus has been known only Late instars also were found in late April in southeastern New Mexico except a site in from Florida, it probably is among lygaeoid species (10, not enumerated) regarded as Roosevelt County where two adults were precinctive {sensu Frank and McCoy 1990) present with late instars. Late instars only were observed in late May 2001 at all sites einasttheartn srtaantege(Bnaorwanoiswsekxite1n9d9e5d).toItpsorstoiuotnhs- in western Oklahoma except one in Dewey of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and County where teneral adults (<10) were South Carolina. The blissid can be consid- present. Late-May collections in southeast- ered a characteristic insect of the fall-line ern New Mexico consisted of late instars Sandhills of the Carolinas and Georgia. only or nymphs plus one or two adults, ex- Southeastern records outside the Sandhills cept the Roosevelt County site noted above, also are mainly from the Coastal Plain. The where adults outnumbered late instars. In relatively few records from the Piedmont late May 2003, adults outnumbered nymphs are near the fall line except for one from in western Oklahoma; a mating pair was Atlanta, Georgia. observed on 29 May in Canadian County. In the Southwest, B. minutus was found Adults were found in southeastern New on weeping lovegrass in parts of western Mexico in late May; only fifth instars were Oklahoma and western Texas, particularly observed in early June in southeastern Ar- where soils are sandy. I collected only an izona (Santa Cruz County). In early May occasional adult in the Edwards Plateau of 2004, only late instars were found in Daw- Texas. It was syntopic with another blissid, son County, Texas, whereas adults (mostly T. umbrata, at numerous sites in Oklahoma teneral) outnumbered fifth instars in Gaines and Texas but was not found in the west- County. Second through fourth instars were ernmost counties ofTexas (except a collec- found in southeastern New Mexico in early tion from Gaines County) or in southeastern May; mid-May collections in southeastern Arizona and southeastern New Mexico. Arizona consisted of third and fourth in- Toonglasa umbrata was the only blissid stars. collected from E. curvula in these more arid VOLUME NUMBER 107, 2 343 regions. I also did not find B. minutus on blissids continually test new plants, with E. curvula in southern Arkansas, eastern most colonizations of novel hosts being un- Oklahoma, and eastern Texas. Additional successful. In other cases, they noted that a fieldwork is needed to determine whether blissid develops on a new host but less ef- populations in the Atlantic and GulfCoastal fectively than on its original hosts; occa- Plain are disjunct from those of the south- sionally, the new host becomes a primary ern Great Plains. Blissus minutus might host, as weeping lovegrass now appears to eventually be found in the relatively little- be for B. minutus. New plants can become studied blackland prairies scattered in Lou- "better" hosts than a blissid's original hosts isiana and occurring more extensively in (Slater and Wilcox 1973). Whether nymph- Alabama and Mississippi (Peacock and al growth and development of B. minutus Schauwecker 2003). Certain othergrassland are increased on E. curvula relative to its insects are known from the Great Plains, native hosts remains to be tested. the Black Belt of Alabama and Mississippi, A South African blissid, Atrademus mar- and the Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plain, itimus Slater and Wilcox, has been collected whereas others show a disjunct Great only from a non-native host (Slater 1976). Plains-Atlantic/Gulf Coastal Plain distribu- When I discovered that B. minutus is com- tion (Brown 2003). mon on the introduced E. curvula, 1 em- Conservation and forage plantings of phasized collections from other grasses weeping lovegrass ordinarily are estab- with extensive crowns in an attempt to de- lished by seeding (Crider 1945, Ahring termine its native hosts. Certain of these 1970, Voigt and Sharp 1995). Therefore, grasses, such as Andropogon species and movement of B. minutus with commerce Muhlenbergia capillaris, proved to be host seems unlikely. Because weeping lovegrass plants, whereas others, such as Aristida can be transplanted as seedlings or crowns beyrichiana, appeared not to be used as divided from older plants (Crider 1945), the hosts. Although blissids often are host.re- possibility that the blissid might have be- stricted (Slater 1976), B. minutus, having come established in new areas via move- been collected from 34 grasses (nymphs ment of vegetative material of E. curx'ula from 21 species) in the subfamilies Aris- (or other host grasses) cannot be dismissed. toideae, Chloridoideae, and Panicoideae, Human-assisted spread of B. occiduus Bar- can be considered a grass generalist {sensu ber (Baxendale et al. 1999) and B. insularis Whitcomb et al. 1988). Toonglasa umbrata, Barber (Sweet 2000) with turfgrasses has whose nymphs were found on nine grasses been suggested. in the Chloridoideae. Panicoideae. and In analyzing host-plant relationships of Pooideae. might also be a grass generalist. blissids. Slater (1976) predicted that era- Wils—on and Wheeler (in press) discussed grostoid grasses "will prove to be widely factors arc—hitectural cotnplexity and phy- used as host plants." Eragrostis curvula in tochemistry that might have allowed cer- South Africa, where it is native, serves as tain rarely collected native planthoppers to a host of the blissid Atrademus capeneri colonize the exotic E. curvula. In ihc case (Slater) and probably also Capodemus her- of B. minutus, which develops in the bosus Slater and Sweet (Slater and Wilcox crowns of its hosts, the large, dense crtn\iis 1973, Slater 1976). After being introduced of E. curvula might allow larger pt>pula- into the southern United States, this plant tions to develop than are typical on most of has been colonized by two New World blis- the bug's native hosts. The large densities sids, B. minutus and T. umhrata. The col- that were observed on weeping lovegrass onization of non-native hosts is common in might reflect the lack of resistance of this the Blissidae (Slater 1976, Sweet 2000). grass to a new herbivore. Small densities of Slater and Wilcox (1973) suggested (hat pestiferous blissids, such as B. Icucopicrus 344 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON Say, often are found on native grasses, Brown (Department of Entomology and whereas much larger, damaging numbers Plant Pathology, Mississippi State Univer- develop on introduced grasses (Sweet sity) for sharing his knowledge of insect 2000). The sandy soils to which E. curvula distribution patterns, and Peter Adler (De- is best adapted (Crider 1945, Voigt and partment of Entomology, Soils, and Plant Sharp 1995) also might have facilitated the Sciences, Clemson University) for com- use of a novel host by B. niinutus, which ments that improved the manuscript. feeds at the base of host grasses. Blissus Literature Cited minutus is found near the soil substrate, as has been reported for B. leucopterus hirtus Ahring, R. M. 1970. Seed production, weeping love- Montandon (Sweet 2000). grass, Eragrostis curvula (Schrad) [sic] Nees, in Oklahoma, pp. 130-138. In Dalrymple, R. L., ed. Acknowledgments Proceedings ofthe FirstWeeping Lovegrass Sym- posium (April 28-29, 1970), Ardmore,Oklahoma. Personnel of the USDA's Natural Re- Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Ardmore, sources Conservation Service were extraor- Oklahoma. dinarily helpful in providing information on Baranowski, R. M. 1995. Seed bugs (Hemiptera: Ly- weeping lovegrass in the Southwest: gaeidae), p. 28. In Frank, J. H. and E. D. McCoy, eds. Precinctive insect species in Florida. Florida Oklahoma (Jim Williams), New Mexico Entomologist 78: 21-35. (Dan Abercrombie, Wallace Cox, Joe Gib- Baxendale, F. P., T. M. Heng-Moss, and T. P. Riordan. son), and Texas (Fred Allison, Donald Gib- 1999. Blissusocciduus(Hemiptera: Lygaeidae): A bons, Reggie Quiett); Donald Gibbons chinch bug pest new to buffalograss turf. Journal (Brownfield, TX) and Joe Gibson (Clovis, ofEcoWnomic Entomology 92: 1172-1176. NM) also accompanied me in the field. I BlatcohfleHye,teropSt.er1a92f5rao.mSothmeesaodudtihteironnaUlnniteewdsSpteactieess, thank Robert Whitcomb (formerly with with characterization ofa new genus. Entomolog- USDA, ARS, Beltsville, MD) for suggest- ical News 36: 45-52. ing that I contact the NRCS and accompa- . 1925b. Two changes of names (Heteroptera, nsyeairncghmReanicnhtihne2f0i0e4ld. aItaltshoe aAmudgurbatoenfulRet-o CNoolr.etoh1p9t2eA6rm.ae)r.HiecEtane,troowmpiottlehoragEiscopraelcTiNrauelewsRBeuf3g6es:re2no4cf5e.Eatsotetrhne Paul Voigt (USDA, ARS, Beaver, WV), Faunas ofIndiana and Florida. Nature Publishing Chet Dewalt (USDA, ARS, Woodward, Co., Indianapolis, 1,116 pp. OK), and Chuck Grimes (Grasslander, Hen- Brown, R. L. 2003. Paleoenvironment and biogeogra- nessey, OK) for useful information on pPehaycoocfk,theE.MiasnsdisTsipSpcihaBulwaecckkeBerl,t,edpsp.. B1l1a-c2k6l.anIdn weeping lovegrass, Thomas Henry (USDA, PrairiesoftheGulfCoastalPlain: Nature,Culture, ARS, Systematic Entomology Laboratory, and Sustainability. University of Alabama Press, Washington, DC) for identifying blissids Tuscaloosa. and accompanying me in the field in Crider,F. J. 1945. Three introducedlovegrassesforsoil Oklahoma in 1999, Patrick McMillan (De- conservation. United States Department of Agri- culture Circular 730: 1-90. partment of Biological Sciences, Clemson Distant, W L. 1893. Insecta. Rhynchota. Hemiptera- University) for identifying grasses, John Heteroptera, Vol. 1. pp 392-462. BiologiaCentra- Townsend (formerly with Clemson's De- li-Americana, London. partment ofBiological Sciences) forobtain- Frank, J. H. and E. D. McCoy. 1990. Introduction to attack and defense: Behavioral ecology ofpreda- ing herbarium records ofEragrostiscurvula tors and their prey. Endemics and epidemics of in the Southwest, David Boyd (USDA, shibboleths and other things causing chaos. Flor- ARS, Poplarville, MS) for providing the ida Entomologist 73: 1-9. maps, Linda Kennedy (National Audubon Henry, T J. 1997. Phylogenetic analysis of family Society Appleton-Whittell Research Ranch, groups within the infraorder Pentatomomorpha Elgin, AZ) for issuing a collection permit (Hemiptera: Heteroptera), with emphasis on the Lygaeoidea. Annals ofthe Entomological Society and making my visits to the Research ofAmerica 90: 275-301. Ranch enjoyable and productive, Richard Leonard, D. E. 1968. A revision ofthe genus Blissus VOLUME NUMBER 107, 2 345 (Heteroptera: Lygaeidae) in eastern North Amer- Sweet, M. H. 2000. Seed and chinch bugs (Lygaeoi- ica. Annals of the Entomological Society of dea). pp. 143-264. //; Schaefen C. W. and A. R. America 61: 239-250. Panizzi, eds. Heteroptera of Economic Impor- Peacock, E. and T. Schauwecker. 2003. The nature, tance. CRC Press. Boca Raton, Florida. culture, and sustainability of blackland prairies, Voigt, P W. and W. C. Sharp. 1995. Grasses of the pp. 1-7. In Peacock, E. and T. Schauwecker, eds. Plains and Southwest, pp. 395-408. In Barnes, R. Blackland Prairies ofthe GulfCoastal Plain: Na- F, D. A. Miller, and C. J. Nelson, eds. Forages, ture, Culture, and Sustainability. UniversityofAl- Vol. 1. An Introduction to Grassland Agriculture, abama Press, Tuscaloosa. 5th ed. Iowa State University Press, Ames. Slater, J. A. 1976. Monocots and chinch bugs: A study Wheeler, A. G., Jr 1999. Oncozygia clavicornis Stal ofhostplantrelationshipsinthelygaeidsubfamily andAllopodops mississippiensis Harris and John- Blissinae (Hemiptera: Lygaeidae). Biotropica 8: .ston: association ofrarely collected Nearcticturtle 143-165. bugs (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae: Podopinae)with Slater, J. A. and R. M. Baranowski. 1990. Lygaeidae an introduced African grass. Proceedings of the of Florida (Hemiptera: Heteroptera). Arthropods Entomological Society of Washington 101: 714- of Florida and Neighboring Land Areas 14: 1- 721. 2003. Rediscovery of Ligyrocoris slossoni 211. . Slater, J. A. and H. Brailovsky. 1983. Review of the (Hemiptera: Lygaeoidea: Rhyparochromidae), a Neotropical genus Toonglasa (Hemiptera: Lygaei- rarely collected seed bug considered precinctive dae). Annals of the Entomological Society of in Florida. Florida Entomologist 86: 219-221. Whitcomb. R. F, A. L. Hicks, D. E. Lynn. H. D. America 76: 523-535. . 1990. A further contribution to the systemat- aBlomcakjeorr,maencdhJa.nPi.sKmraemnehra.nci19n8g8.inHseocsttdsipveecrisfiitcyityi:n idcase:ofBltihsesingaeen)u.sJoTuoronnagllaosfat(heHemNiepwterYao:rkLygEanetio-- fgorrads,sleadnsd.s.ThPeapPerrair1i1e.:06R.ooIntsDaovfiosu,rAC.ulatnudreG:.FSotuann-- mological Society 98: 406-423. dation ofour Economy. Proceedings ofthe Tenth Slater, J. A. and D. B. Wilcox. 1973. The chinch bugs North American Prairie Conference of Texas or Blissinae of South Africa (Hemiptera: Lygaei- Woman's University, Denton, Texas. June 22-26, dae). Memoirs of the Entomological Society of 1986. Native Prairie Association ofTexas, Dallas. Southern Africa 12: 1-135. Wilson, S. W. and A. G. Wheeler, Jn In press. An Soreng, R. J., G. Davidse, P. M. Peterson, F. O. Zuloa- Africangrassrecruitsrarelycollectednativeplant- ga, E. J. Judziewicz, T. S. Filgueiras, andO. Mor- hoppers (Hemiptera: Fulgoroidea: Dictyopharidae, rone. 2004. CatalogueofNewWorldgrasses,http: Fulgoridae): Hidden diversity in crowns of Era- //mobot.mobot.org/W3T/Search/nwgc.html (ac- grostis curviila (Poaceae). Journal of the New cessed 9 Feb. 2004). York Entomological Society.

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