Cacao pollination in Costa Rica, 2: Breeding sites of Ceratopogonid (Diptera, Nematocera) midges

In the search for breeding sites of ceratopogonid cacao pollinators in cacao plantations at Turrialba, Costa Rica, rotting leaves (mulch), decaying banana pseudostems and bracts, humid moss from cacao trunks and decaying mushrooms taken from stumps were processed in Berlese funnels in the laboratory. Thirty-seven Atrichopogon midges, 12 Forcipomyia, one Dasyhelea and one Stylobezzia were reared from decaying banana. Seven adult specimens of Lasiohelea were reared from moss. Six Forcipomyia adults were reared, four from cacao pods, one from banana bracts and one from leaf mulch. Few Culicoides midges were obtained from cacao husks. Decaying mushrooms did not render any kind of ceratopogonid midges. Midges in the subgenus Forcipomyia (Euprojoannisia) the main cacao pollinators in Costa Rica, were absent in the sample studied. The numbers encountered were not very high, probably as a consequence of the short duration of the sampling period

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 120629 Soria, S. de J., 56579 Chapman, R.K., 83451 Knoke, J.K.
Format: biblioteca
Published: 1981
Subjects:THEOBROMA CACAO, POLINIZACION, POLINIZADORES, FORCIPOMYIA, CERATOPOGONIDAE, DISTRIBUCION NATURAL, COSTA RICA,
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