Abstract

SUMMARYIn spring 1974 and 1975 many adult Apion vorax were found at Rothamsted in woods bordering fields that had been cropped with field beans (Vicia faba) the previous season. The weevils were most common on bramble (Rubus spp.), dog's mercury (Mercurialis perennis) and nettle (Urtica dioica). A decrease in the woodland population in May coincided with the appearance of the weevil on field bean crops in neighbouring areas.In laboratory feeding tests, adult weevils fed more on field bean leaves than on leaves of plants on which they were common in woodlands, and they fed more on field beans in May than at other times of the year. No difference was observed in the feeding of male and female weevils.Many A. vorax were caught on sticky traps in woodlands at Rothamsted in 1975, particularly in April and May, but very few were caught on sticky traps in bean crops. The numbers of A. vorax recorded on the upper foliage of bean crops at Rothamsted in June each year from 1970 to 1980 ranged from 0 to 10 per 10‐m row.Eggs, larvae and pupae of A. vorax were found in field bean flowers collected from field crops. The larvae were feeding on the tips of the pistils and stamens. Adult weevils that emerged in mid‐June from the flowers of autumn‐sown beans mated and produced a second generation when caged on glasshouse‐grown plants. Some Apion larvae, possibly A. vorax, were found inside flowers of common vetch (Vicia sativa).The name ‘bean flower weevil’ is considered a suitable common name for A. vorax.

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