Jadera haematoloma

Jadera haematoloma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Family: Rhopalidae
Genus: Jadera
Species: J. haematoloma
Binomial name
Jadera haematoloma
(Herrich-Schäffer, 1847)

Jadera haematoloma, the red-shouldered bug, goldenrain-tree bug or soapberry bug is a species of true bug that lives throughout the United States and south to northern South America.[1] It feeds on seeds within the soapberry plant family, Sapindaceae, and is known to rapidly adapt to feeding on particular hosts. People often confuse this species with the boxelder bug.

Description

J. haematoloma are typically 9.5–13.5 millimetres (0.37–0.53 in) long and 3–4 millimetres (0.12–0.16 in) wide, though the short-winged form (brachyptera) usually is 7–8 millimetres (0.28–0.31 in) long. Color is mostly blackish (sometimes dark gray or purplish) except for red eyes, "shoulders" (lateral margins of pronotum), and costal margins and dorsal part of abdomen. Nymphs are mostly red with a black pronotum and wingpads. All appendages are blackish.[1]

Distribution

For most of the twentieth century, little was known about the range of J. haematoloma. Reports showed breeding populations to be present in Florida, Kansas, Colorado, Texas, Arizona, California, Alabama, Illinois, North Carolina, Missouri, Colorado, Iowa, as well as Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania and Maryland.[2][3][4][5][6] A study published in 1987, showed the distribution of J. haematoloma "revealed the close correspondence of records for the bug with the ranges of the soapberry plants that serve as the insects native hosts."[7] In addition, isolated examples have been reported as far north as Minnesota. Outside of the United States, J. haematoloma is found south through Central America and the West Indies to Colombia and Venezuela.[8][9]

Evolution

Two populations in southern Florida are particularly notable. The more southern of these two populations feeds on the seeds of a native host vine balloon vine (Cardiospermum corindum). This vine produces capsules of a fairly uniform size, which adult J. haematoloma feed on by inserting their mouthparts (beak) through the capsule's exterior and into the interior seeds. In the mid-1950s, a related southeast Asian tree, the Taiwanese Flamegold (Koelreuteria elegans), was introduced as an ornamental plant. It escaped domestication and naturalized. Significantly, the Flamegold was colonized by J. haematoloma, though its capsules are smaller and the seeds less deeply embedded than in the balloon vine.

In a seminal paper published in the scientific journal Genetica in 2001, it was shown that evolution that had taken place in this colonizing population of J. haematoloma on the Flamegold in a period of only a few decades.[10] They showed that the beak length, which in the ancestral type was about 70% the length of the body, was only about 50% the body length in the insects that had colonized the non-native tree, though the size of the bugs themselves had not changed. In addition, they found that:[11]

...derived bugs mature 25% more rapidly, are 20% more likely to survive, and lay almost twice as many eggs when reared on seeds of the introduced host rather than those of the native host. Fecundity is also twice as great as that of ancestral type bugs reared on either host, while egg mass is 20% smaller.

References

  1. 1 2 Mead FW, Fasulo TR. Scentless plant bugs, Jadera spp. Featured Creatures. July 2007. Last accessed 2008-08-08
  2. Van Duzee, E. P. (1917). "Catalogue of the Hemiptera of America north of Mexico excepting the Aphididae, Coccidae, and Aleurodidae.". University of California Publications, Technical Bulletins, Entomology 2: i–xiv, 1–902. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.29381.
  3. Blatchley, W.S. (1926). Heteroptera or True Bugs of Eastern North America, with Especial Reference to the Faunas of Indiana and Florida. Indianapolis: The Nature Publishing Company. p. 1166.
  4. Brimley, C.S. (1938). The Insects of North Carolina, Being a List of the Insects of North Carolina and Their Near Relatives. Raleigh: North Carolina Department of Agriculture. p. 560.
  5. Froeschner, Richard C. (1944). "Contributions to a synopsis of the Hemiptera of Missouri, pt. III. Lygaeidae, Pyrrhocoridae, Piesmidae, Tingididae, Enicocephalidae, Phymatidae, Ploriaridae, Reduviidae, Nabidae". American Midland Naturalist 31: 638–683. doi:10.2307/2421413.
  6. Slater, J.A.; R.M. Baranowski (1978). How to Know True Bugs. Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown. p. 256.
  7. Carroll, S.P.; E. Loye (1987). "Specialization of Jadera species (Hemiptera: Rhopalidae) on the seeds of Sapindaceae (Sapindales), and coevolutionary responses of defense and attack". Annals of the Entomological Society of America 80: 373–378.
  8. Richard L. Hoffman & Warren E. Steiner Jr. (2005). "Jadera haematoloma, Another Insect on its Way North (Heteroptera: Rhopalidae)" (PDF). Banisteria 26: 7–10.
  9. Carroll, S.P. (1988): Contrasts in reproductive ecology between temperate and tropical populations of Jadera haematoloma, a mate-guarding Hemipteran (Rhopalidae). Entomological Society of America, 81, 54-63.
  10. Scott P. Carroll, Hugh Dingle, Thomas R. Famula & CharlesW. Fox (2001). "Genetic architecture of adaptive differentiation in evolving host races of the soapberry bug, Jadera haematoloma" (PDF). Genetica. 112–113: 257–272. doi:10.1007/978-94-010-0585-2_16.
  11. Carroll, S.P., Klassen, S.P. & Dingle, H (1998): Rapidly evolving adaptations to host ecology and nutrition in the soapberry bug. Evolution and Ecology, 12, 955-968.

External links

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