Abstract

Introduced European genotypes of Phragmites australis are invasive and widespread in North America. Decades of management using herbicide and other means have failed to control the species and its range and populations continue to expand. Allowing continued invasion threatens native wetland biota and an endemic North American subspecies Phragmites australis americanus. The lack of conventional management to control introduced P. australis triggered research to assess host specificity of two European noctuid moths, Archanara geminipuncta and Archanara neurica. These two species are considered particularly promising potential biocontrol agents for introduced P. australis. Here we provide the complete and approved list of test plants used to assess host specificity of A. geminipuncta and A. neurica. This includes data on neonate larval acceptance and survival under no-choice conditions, and oviposition tests for all plant species tested, including for different Phragmites subspecies currently occurring in North America. We further provide temperature profiles of select cities in the temperate native European distribution of the two noctuids and those in southern US climates. We used these long-term temperature records to assess whether overwintering eggs of A. geminipuncta and A. neurica can survive under climate conditions typical for the Gulf Coast region in North America. This data article refers to “Host specificity and risk assessment of Archanarageminipuncta and Archanaraneurica, two potential biocontrol agents for invasive Phragmitesaustralis in North America Biol. Control (2018)”.

Highlights

  • Introduced European genotypes of Phragmites australis are invasive and widespread in North America

  • Blossey et al / Data in Brief 19 (2018) 1755–1764 in southern US climates. We used these long-term temperature records to assess whether overwintering eggs of A. geminipuncta and A. neurica can survive under climate conditions typical for the Gulf Coast region in North America

  • We provide a comprehensive list and results for all test plant species used to assess host specificity for Archanara geminipuncta and Archanara neurica

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Summary

Data accessibility

Plant insect interactions Invasive plants, biological weed control Tables of test plants, results of oviposition and larval development tests, and temperature profiles Reference literature on plant taxonomy, USDA Plants Database [1] and city data available on the web: http://www.usclimatedata.com https://www.timeanddate.com Raw None We used selected plant species to test acceptance or suitability for larval development or oviposition by two noctuid moths. We use temperature profiles of select locations to program incubators to resemble local climate conditions to test for winter survival of noctuid eggs. We provide a comprehensive list and results for all test plant species used to assess host specificity (oviposition and larval development) for Archanara geminipuncta and Archanara neurica. We provide data on temperature profiles we used to assess the possibility of winter survival under different climate conditions for select locations in Europe and North America. This allows an assessment of the ability of A. geminipuncta and A. neurica to colonize regions with different climate conditions in North America based on their current distribution in Europe. DE, ID, IL, KY, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, NH, NJ, NY, OH, MB, NB, NL, NS, PA, RI, VT, VA, WI

TAG Test Plant Categories include
Larval acceptance
Oviposition choice experiments
Egg survival under southern climates

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