Abstract

Forced and choice feeding and oviposition experiments were conducted by caging overwinteredPissodes strobi on lateral branches or leaders of sympatric Engelmann spruce and/or western white pine trees in Manning Provincial Park, British Columbia, or on transplanted, potted trees in Burnaby, British Columbia. Whereas femaleP. strobi preferred to feed on 1-year-old Engelmann spruce lateral branches in both the forced- and choice-feeding experiments, male weevils failed to discriminate between this host and western white pine. Forced-feeding experiments that utilized 1-year-old leaders demonstrated that western white pine is an acceptable host forP. strobi feeding, but that the native host, Engelmann spruce, is preferred under choice conditions. In all experiments, female weevils oviposited only on Engelmann spruce. These results indicate that the releasing stimulus for feeding is present in the bark of both conifer species and suggests that a separate releasing stimulus for oviposition is absent from western white pine.

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