Английская Википедия:Forficula auricularia

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Speciesbox Forficula auricularia is a species complex comprising the common earwig or European earwig, an omnivorous insect in the family Forficulidae. The European earwig survives in a variety of environments and is a common household insect in North America. The name earwig comes from the appearance of the hindwings, which are unique and distinctive among insects, and resemble a human ear when unfolded; the species name of the common earwig, auricularia, is a specific reference to this feature.[1][2] They are considered a household pest because of their tendency to invade crevices in homes and consume pantry foods,[3] and may act either as a pest or as a beneficial species depending on the circumstances.[4][5]

Forficula auricularia is reddish-brown in color, with a flattened and elongate body, and slender, beaded antennae. Earwigs feature pair of 'pincers' or forceps at the tip of the flexible abdomen. Both sexes have these pincers; in males they are large and very curved, whereas in females they are straight. Nymphs are similar to adults in appearance, but their wings are either absent or small.[6]

Morphology

Файл:EB1911 Orthoptera - Common Earwig.jpg
Illustration of common earwig with wings extended

Forficula auricularia has an elongated flattened brownish-colored body,[7] with a shield-shaped pronotum,[8] two pairs of wings and a pair of forcep-like cerci.[9] They are about Шаблон:Cvt long. The second tarsal segment is lobed, extending distally below the third tarsal segment.[10] The antenna consists of 11–14 segments, and the mouth parts are of the chewing type.[7]

Adult males are polymorphic in body weight and head width, as well as cercus length and width.[11] The male forceps are very robust and broadened basally with crenulate teeth.[12] The female forceps are about 3 mm long, and are less robust and straighter. The cerci are used during mating, feeding, and self-defense. Females also have tegmina of about Шаблон:Cvt in length. Third instar or older nymphs that have lost one branch of cerci are capable of regenerating it in form of a straight structure. Males with asymmetrical forceps are called gynandromorphs or hermaphrodites because they resemble females.[13]

Distribution

Native to Europe, western Asia and probably North Africa,[14][15] Forficula auricularia was introduced to North America in the early twentieth century and is currently spread throughout much of the continent.[12] It was accidentally introducted into New Zealand by Early European settlers.[16] European earwigs are most commonly found in temperate climates, since they were originally discovered in the Palearctic region, and are most active when the daily temperature has minimal fluctuation.[3][17]

Taxonomy

A detailed analysis of mitochondial DNA from specimens across Europe has established that F. auriculata is a complex of several morphologically indistinguishable species. There are at least four species in the Forficula auricularia complex: Forficula auricularia, Forficula dentata, Forficula mediterranea, and Forficula aeolica.[18]

In this treatment the name F. auriculata applies to those found in Scandinavia and Central Europe, whereas Forficula dentata is the usual species found in the British Isles and Western Europe. These correspond to species A and species B below. There are several other members of the complex based on mitochondial haplotypes.[18]

In North America, European earwigs were found to comprise two sibling species, which are reproductively isolated.[19] Populations in cold continental climates mostly have one clutch per year, forming species A,[20] whereas those in warmer climates have two clutches per year, forming species B.[19][21]

Behavior

European earwigs spend the daytime in cool, dark, inaccessible places such as flowers, fruits, and wood crevices.[9][14][22] Active primarily at night, they seek out food ranging from plant matter to small insects. Though they are omnivorous, they are considered as scavengers rather than predators.[3] Often they consume plant matter, though they have also been known to feed on aphids, spiders, insect eggs, and dead plants and insects, among other things.[17] Their favorite plants include the common crucifer Sisymbrium officinale, the white clover Trifolium repens, and the dahlia Dahlia variabilis.[23] They also like to feed on molasses, as well as on nonvascular plants, lichens and algae.[14] They prefer meat or sugar to natural plant material even though plants are a major natural food source.[24] European earwigs prefer aphids to plant material such as leaves and fruit slices of apple, cherry and pear.[25] Adults eat more insects than do nymphs.[14]

Although F. auricularia have well-developed wings, they are fairly weak and are rarely, if ever, used.[22] Instead, as their main form of transportation, earwigs are carried from one place to another on clothing or commercial products like lumber, ornamental shrubs and even newspaper bundles.[12][26]

Reproduction

Courtship

Courtship in European common earwigs is unique in the sense that both males and females take active roles in courtship. Unlike most earwig species, detailed observations of the courtship and mating processes in Forficula auricularia reveal complex sexual behaviors for both the males and females.  The European earwig possesses sexually dimorphic cerci (forceps). The males have large, heavy, curved forceps whereas the females have straight and slender forceps.  Studies have demonstrated the significance of these cerci for use as displays in early courtship and as a tactile stimulus for the female during copulation.

Early courtship typically consists of male displays in which they wave or bob the cerci. The common earwigs do not have a sex pheromone because they already have an aggregation pheromone which already brings the male and female insects into close proximity with one another. Courtship will then progress to tactile stimulation by the males and sometimes females, if they are receptive. The males tend to use their cerci to stroke and encircle the female’s body.  Both sexes participate in waving, bobbing, and stroking movements, but only males use their forceps to encircle the female. It is interesting to note that the cerci seem to be strictly used for courtship/stimulation and defense against any potential threats; the males do not ever use the forceps aggressively as claspers to hold the female in place during copulation.

The cerci stimulation is followed by abdomen arching, bobbing, and twisting before copulation occurs.  Research suggests that male cerci are necessary for reproductive success because of their role as either secondary sexual characteristics for courtship or as weapons in altercations; males with their cerci removed were unable to successfully find a mate.[27]

Copulation

A male finds prospective mates by olfaction. After a complex courtship performance by both the male and female, the male slips his cerci under the tip of the female's abdomen so that his and her ventral abdominal surfaces are in contact with each other, while both face in opposite directions. If not disturbed, pairs can stay in this mating position for many hours.[9][13] During copulation, the females often move around and feed.  Because they provide brood care, female Forficula auricularia have intensive nutritional requirements which likely motivates their activity during copulation—especially because female European earwigs rarely ever feed during oviposition, incubation, and brood care.[27] Matings occurred frequently among clustered individuals particularly in locations that allow both partners to cling to a surface.[9] Under laboratory conditions, the mating season peaked during August and September, and a single mating event enabled females to lay fertilized eggs.[13]

Maternal Care

A female earwig with a pile of eggs in the dirt.
Female with nest

European earwig nymphs look very similar to their adult counterparts except that they are a lighter color.[12] The young go through four nymphal stages and do not leave the nest until after the first moult.[3]

European earwigs overwinter about Шаблон:Cvt below the surface of the ground. The female earwig lays a clutch of about 50 eggs in an underground nest in the autumn. She enters a dormant state and stays in the nest with the eggs. Common earwigs exhibit varying levels of maternal care. Female earwigs typically show maternal care through behaviors such as guarding and tending to their eggs and nymphs. The female cares for her young by shifting the eggs about and continuously cleaning them with her mouth and forceps to avoid fungal growth and pathogens through careful extraction of fungal spores from the eggs. She protects the eggs by staying close to the nest, fiercely defending against predators, applying chemical protection against desiccation through egg grooming, and relocating the entire clutch under stressful conditions.[28] They protect the eggs by staying close to the nest and by defending against predators.[29] In the spring, she spreads them out into a single layer and the young emerge from the eggs.[17] After the eggs hatch in the spring, the mother continues to care for the nymphs, providing protection, grooming, food, and sometimes even regulating the temperature in the nest. The mother provides food from the larval stage to the first instar (term for a developmental stage in insects) and will continue to defend the aggregated family group in the burrow and on nocturnal foraging excursions.[29] She guards them until they reach maturity after about one month. It is possible for the female to lay a second brood in one season and by the end of August all of the young reach maturity.[3]

Life Cycle

Файл:Earwig life cycle 2.svg
Earwig life cycle illustration

European common earwigs can produce either one or two broods per year. Females and males often hibernate together in pairs in underground nests. Females oviposit their eggs at the end of winter/ beginning of spring and then expel the male from the nest. These eggs are pale yellow or cream colored and have an elliptical shape.  The mother incubates and cares for the eggs until they hatch. After hatching, the nymphs go through four nymphal instars before reaching maturity and adulthood. There are two distinct phases of the common earwig’s life: the nesting phase and the free-foraging phase. In the nesting phase, family units consist of the male and female pair and then just the female and her nymphs. They may leave the nest at night for foraging excursions, but the mother and her nymphs return to the nest and stay there during the daytime. In the free-foraging phase, different family units will interact, and the nymphs no longer return to their nests after foraging. Instead, they go on long foraging excursions and shelter in trees and crevices. At this point, females may produce a second brood since they have finished raising and tending to the first brood.[30][31]

Selfish vs Altruistic Behavior

Maternal care can drastically increase the survival and development of young earwigs, contributing to their overall reproductive success.  However, parental care can be costly as well. It is widely accepted that relations between parents and offspring are shaped by an intersection of selfish and altruistic tendencies that ultimately reflect a compromise of each individual’s evolutionary interests. The common earwigs, as well as any species, have to carefully weigh the increased offspring survival benefits and the potential parental fecundity costs associated with parental care.[32] 

One explicit form of altruistic behavior in common earwig beetles is the fact that female common earwigs do not reject foreign offspring or eggs and will exhibit the same level of care to foreign eggs as her own eggs.  In many species, kin bias prevents parents from investing care and energy into any foreign offspring in order to allow them to more effectively invest in their own offspring thus ensuring that their own genes are passed on.  Common earwig mothers, however, will not eliminate foreign eggs and will actually groom, defend, and provide for them to the same extent at which she cares for her own eggs.  A likely explanation would be that common earwig mothers simply cannot differentiate between their own eggs and foreign eggs, but this is not the case.  Common earwig mothers immediately and regularly apply a bouquet of cuticular hydrocarbons to the surface of their eggs.  This bouquet is family specific and should, therefore, allow for easy differentiation between one’s own eggs and foreign eggs.  This phenomenon indicates that there is limited selection pressures promoting female common earwigs to reject foreign eggs which allows them to display the altruistic behavior of caring for foreign offspring.[28]

Habitat

Файл:Earwig (Forficula auricularia) female.jpg
Female

European earwigs survive well in cool, moist habitats and have an optimum mean growth temperature of Шаблон:Convert.[14] Their daily abundance in a given year has been linked to factors such as temperature, wind velocity and the prevalence of easterly winds.[33] The development of European earwigs also depends on temperature.[13][14] Thus, the occurrence of European earwigs can be predicted based on weather parameters.[31] Hibernating adults can tolerate cool temperatures, but their survival is reduced in poorly drained soils such as clay.[14] To avoid excessive moisture, they seek the southern side of well-drained slopes. Sometimes they also occupy the hollow stems of flowers where the soil is poorly drained.[13][34] Their eggs are capable of resisting damage from cold and heat.[35]

Aggregation

Males, females, and nymphs of the Forficula auricularia species produce aggregation pheromones that trigger specific behavioral responses from members of the same species regardless of their sex or developmental stage.  Research shows that common earwigs display significant behavioral responses to both physically accessible and physically inaccessible stimuli.  This indicates that common earwigs detect and respond to this aggregation pheromone through olfaction rather than through a mechanism such as contact chemoreception.  This helps the earwig beetles detect shelters to hide in during the daytime after their nocturnal foraging excursions.[30]

Scientists believe that common earwigs produce this aggregation pheromone in their tibial glands, cuticular lipids, or fecal matter. Males, females, and nymphs all exhibit strong responses to the aggregation pheromone. However, there is mounting evidence that the aggregation pheromones are stage-specific meaning depending on the chemical contents of the particular pheromone, it will be more likely to attract either nymphs or adults. In order to attract adult common earwig beetles, benzoquinones must be a component of the aggregation pheromone. The same was not true for nymph-stage common earwigs which responded well to experimental aggregation pheromones with and without the benzoquinones.[30]

European common earwigs aggregate in shelters during the day in groups ranging from 50 to 100 individuals per square meter. Common earwigs seek out dark and humid shelters for use during the day, and the gregarious beetles prefer shelters that have been occupied previously due to the presence of an aggregation pheromone. Unfortunately, they have become relatively harmful pests in residential areas—damaging fruits, vegetables, flowers, and some tree fruit crops.  Scientists hope to uncover the necessary components of the European common earwig aggregation pheromone because this could allow them to manufacture synthetic aggregation pheromones to use as bait to draw the beetles away from crops and gardens.[30]

Coprophagy

Group living comes with many benefits but also many costs. One example is the accumulation of feces in a shared nesting site which can become a breeding ground for a wide variety of fungi and pathogenic bacteria or attract predators and help them locate the nest. In nest-dwelling species that aggregate in very large groups like the Forficula auricularia, these risks increase.  However, keeping feces in the nesting site has actually proved advantageous for Forficula auricularia despite these concerns. Feces possesses antimicrobial properties that can prevent the growth of certain dangerous pathogens. Keeping feces in the nest also fosters allo-copography (consumption of the feces of other members of one’s species) which can have positive effects such as promoting the transfer of helpful gut bacteria and providing a food source when food is scarce. In fact, access to sibling feces significantly enhanced the survival rate of nymphs when food was scarce.  However, regardless of the scarcity of regular food, nymphs always consume some maternal or nymphal feces which implies that this behavior in earwigs has evolved to have many incentives and is not just a desperate measure to prevent starvation in cases of food scarcity.[36]

Agricultural impact

Файл:F-auricularia F in cherry at night - HH20070617 657.jpg
Common earwig feeding on an apple

Forficula auricularia has been known to cause significant damage to crops, flowers, and fruit orchards when at high population levels. Some of the commercially valuable vegetables it feeds upon include cabbage, cauliflower, chard, celery, lettuce, potato, beet, and cucumber among others. Earwigs readily consume corn (maize) silk and can damage the crop. Among fruits, they have been found to damage apple and pear orchards. On apple trees specifically, Forficula auricularia feed on the fruits (primarily on parts where the fruit is already rotting or cracked) and contaminate the fruits with frass (powdery wood debris that is the result of insect foraging/ boring).[37]They damage young plum and peach trees in early spring, when other food is scarce, by devouring blossoms and leaves at night. It is not uncommon to find them wedged among petals of fresh cut carnations, roses, dahlia and zinnia.[17]

In addition to the agricultural problems caused, F. auricularia emit a foul odor and have a tendency to aggregate together in or near human dwellings.[17]

Control of F. auricularia has been attempted using some of its natural enemies, including the parasitoid fly Bigonicheta spinipenni, the fungi Erynia forficulae and Metarhizium anisopliae, as well as many species of birds.[17] The tachinid flies Triarthria setipennis (Fallen) and Ocytata pallipes have been introduced in North America to control F. auricularia in the 1920s.[38]

Insecticides have also been successfully implemented, although commercial products are rarely targeted specifically towards earwigs. Multipurpose insecticides for control of earwigs, grasshoppers, sowbugs and other insects are more common.[17] Diazinon, an organophosphate insecticide, has been known to continue killing F. auricularia up to 17 days after initial spraying.[39]

Humans have, however, found beneficial uses of F. auricularia in the pest management of other insects. The European common earwig is an omnivore and is also referred to as a generalist predator or scavenger meaning they have many different forms of prey and will feed on whichever prey species is most available. The European earwig is a natural predator of a number of other agricultural pests, including the pear psyllid and several aphid species, and in this regard has been used to control outbreaks of such organisms.[5] The common earwig is an important predator of many different orchard/ crop pests such as the wooly apple aphid (Eriosoma lanigerum) which is one of the most problematic pests in apple orchards. Research has repeatedly shown that low numbers of common earwigs are associated with wooly apple aphid infestations whereas high numbers of common earwigs lead to decreased aphid populations in orchards so much so that farmers sometimes do not even need to use chemicals or pesticides. Therefore, despite their potential adverse effects on some crops, European common earwigs play a crucial role in managing wooly aphid apple populations in apple orchards.[37] Damage to crops by F. auricularia is limited as long as there are high population levels of their insect prey.[4]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Further reading

External links

Шаблон:Commons category Шаблон:Wikispecies

Шаблон:Taxonbar Шаблон:Authority control

  1. Шаблон:Cite book
  2. Шаблон:Cite web
  3. 3,0 3,1 3,2 3,3 3,4 Шаблон:Cite web
  4. 4,0 4,1 Vickery, V. and D. Kevan. 1986. The Insects and Arachnids of Canada, Part 14. Canada Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa, ON.
  5. 5,0 5,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  6. Шаблон:Cite web
  7. 7,0 7,1 Шаблон:Cite book
  8. Шаблон:Cite journal
  9. 9,0 9,1 9,2 9,3 Шаблон:Cite journal
  10. Шаблон:Cite book
  11. Шаблон:Cite journal
  12. 12,0 12,1 12,2 12,3 Шаблон:Cite web
  13. 13,0 13,1 13,2 13,3 13,4 Шаблон:Cite journal
  14. 14,0 14,1 14,2 14,3 14,4 14,5 14,6 Шаблон:Cite journal
  15. Шаблон:Cite book
  16. Шаблон:Cite book
  17. 17,0 17,1 17,2 17,3 17,4 17,5 17,6 Capinera, J. 2001. Handbook of Vegetable Pests. Academic Press, San Diego, CA.
  18. 18,0 18,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  19. 19,0 19,1 Wirth T., et al. (1998). Molecular and reproductive characterization of sibling species in the European earwig (Forficula auricularia). Evolution 52(1) 260–65.
  20. Шаблон:Cite journal
  21. Шаблон:Cite journal
  22. 22,0 22,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  23. Шаблон:Cite journal
  24. Шаблон:Cite journal
  25. Шаблон:Cite journal
  26. Шаблон:Cite book
  27. 27,0 27,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  28. 28,0 28,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  29. 29,0 29,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  30. 30,0 30,1 30,2 30,3 Hehar, Gagandeep Kaur. "Pheromonal communication in European earwigs, forficula auricularia l.(Dermaptera: Forficulidae)." (2007).
  31. 31,0 31,1 Шаблон:Cite journal
  32. Шаблон:Cite journal
  33. Шаблон:Cite journal
  34. Шаблон:Cite journal
  35. Шаблон:Cite journal
  36. Шаблон:Cite journal
  37. 37,0 37,1 Helsen; Trapman; Polflliet; Simonse (2004). "Presence of the common earwig Forficula auricularia L. in apple orchards and its impact on the woolly apple aphid Eriosoma lanigerum (Haussmann)". IOBC. 30 (4): 31–35.
  38. Bugguide.net. Species Forficula auricularia - European Earwig
  39. Шаблон:Cite journal