Abstract

The Mexican rice borer, Eoreuma loftini (Dyar), is native to Mexico, and has been reported in the Mexican states of Baja California, Colima, Hustecas, Jalisco, Michoacan, Nayarit, Nuevo Leon, Oaxaca, San Luis Potosi, Sinaloa, Sonora, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and Yucatan (Morill 1925; Van Zwaluwenburg 1926; Riess 1981; Johnson 1984; Rodriguez-del-Bosque et al. 1989; ReayJones et al. 2007). Eoreuma. loftini was originally described by Dyar (1917) as a member of the genus Chilo Zincken from a specimen collected in Arizona, U.S.A. The species was transferred to Eoreuma Ely by Klots (1970). It has been collected from sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.), corn (Zea mays L.), rice (Oryza sativa L.), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench), and lemongrass (Cymbopogon citrates I flexuosus L.) (Johnson 1984). Weedy grasses including johnsongrass (Sorghum halepense (L.) Pers.), vaseygrass (Paspalum urvillei Steud.), Amazon sprangletop (Leptochloa panicoides (J. Presi) Hitchc), and barnyardgrass (Echinochloa crus-galli (L.) P. Beauv.) also have been reported as hosts (Reagan et al. 2007). It was first reported in the Lower Rio Grande Valley (LRGV) of Texas, U.S.A. during 1959 when a single larva was detected in sugarcane shipped from Mexico (Johnson 1984). By 1980, E. loftini had established itself as a serious pest in the LRGV and populations subsequently spread into the rice production region of Texas along the Gulf Coast (Johnson & van Leerdam 1981, Browning et al. 1989). From 2000 to 2002, female sex pheromone traps captured E. loftini moths in seven new southeast Texas counties (Reagan et al. 2005; Reay-Jones et al. 2007). During 2002, moths were captured within 100 km of sugarcane in east Texas and within 200 km of sugarcane in Louisiana. By 2004, E. loftini was present in over 75% of the Texas rice growing area and had spread into sugarcane plantings in Chambers County, Texas (Reagan et al. 2005, Reay-Jones et al. 2007). In an attempt to slow the spread of E. loftini into Louisiana, in 1999, the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF) entered into a compliance agreement with the Texas Department of Agriculture which placed restrictions on the entry oiE. loftini infested Texas sugarcane into Louisiana for processing. This agreement required that east Texas sugarcane fields be monitored for E. loftini using pheromone traps. The agreement's conditions also stipulated that a positive E. loftini finding in east Texas sugarcane would automatically trigger the establishment of a one-mile-radius quarantine around that field and sugarcane within that quarantined area could not be shipped into Louisiana. All truckloads of sugarcane destined for Louisiana were required to be tagged and certified as E. loftini free (Reagan et al. 2005). In a proactive effort to monitor the natural spread of E. loftini, LDAF initiated deployment of 12 pheromone traps during fall 1999 at selected sugarcane fields and adjacent to sugarcane processing facilities in Louisiana. The number of traps deployed annually increased from 12 to 40 through 2005. During this timeframe, traps also were placed near rice fields. Beginning in 2005, 35 to 40 traps have been deployed annually. Traps remained in the field from planting of rice (Mar) through harvest of sugarcane (DecJan), and until processing facilities finished milling sugarcane. The detection of E. loftini in 2 east Texas pheromone traps adjacent to sugarcane in 2004 (2-IX2004, 20-IX-2004, 2-X-2004) triggered a one-mileradius quarantine (Reagan et al. 2005). By 2005, E. loftini was widespread in east Texas and all sugarcane from that area was prohibited from entry into Louisiana due to the risk of accidental introduction of E. loftini (Reagan et al. 2007). This prohibition helped to slow the spread of E. loftini movement into Louisiana (Reay-Jones et al. 2008). The pheromone trap monitoring program determined that E. loftini was expanding its range 16.5 km/yr through the Texas rice belt toward Louisiana (Reay-Jones et al. 2007). Based on natural movement, Reay-Jones et al. (2007) predicted that E. loftini would establish in Louisiana during 2008. On 12-XII-2008 one E. loftini adult was detected in each of 2 pheromone traps in Calcasieu Parish (Louisiana, U.S.A.) located approximately 8 km from the Texas border. These traps were adjacent to harvested rice fields approximately 8 km apart. C. Carlton confirmed identifications by examination of male genitalia and com-

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