Leek moth
The leek moth or onion leaf miner is a species of moth of family Acrolepiidae and the genus Acrolepiopsis. The species is native to Europe and Siberia, but is also found in North America, where it is an invasive species. While it was initially recorded in Hawaii, this was actually a misidentification of Acrolepiopsis sapporensis.
The leek moth is similar in appearance to other members of the genus Acrolepiopsis, with mottled brown and white wings. Its wing span is approximately 12 mm across.
It is a pest of leek crops, as the larvae feed on several species of Allium by mining into the leaves or bulbs. The shape of the leaf mine is variable, ranging from a corridor to a blotch, and can be with or without frass. This leaf mining can occur in the tubular leaves or in the stem. In the case of onions and shallots, the larvae mine into the bulb. In North America, where the moth is an invasive species and has few known natural predators, the species threatens the production and biodiversity of Allium, and it has the potential to destroy entire crops. The parasitoid Diadromus pulchellus is used to control the spread of and damage caused by the leek moth in Europe and North America.
Description
The wings are brown mottled with white spots and measure about 12 mm across. High individual variation in wing pattern can make the leek moth difficult to distinguish from other Acrolepiopsis species at first, but its distinct genitalia make it easily identifiable. Males of this species can be identified by their long saccus, a portion of the male genitalia used for grasping females, and females by their long and flat ductus bursae, a portion of the female reproductive tract.Distribution
The leek moth is native to Europe, where it is present throughout the entire continent. Scandinavia and Russia mark the northwestern and northeastern bounds of its range, respectively, and its presence extends to Algeria in the south. It is an invasive species in North America, where it was first discovered in Canada in 1993. It has since expanded its North American range to include parts of Ontario, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, New York, and Nova Scotia. Climate models suggest that the leek moth's range could continue to expand to encompass a larger portion of eastern North America.Larval host plants
Host plant selection
The female leek moth selects the host plant for oviposition. She is drawn to the plant through thiosulphinates, chemical attractants released by the plant. Egg-laying does not take place immediately, however; it occurs only after longer contact with the leaf, during which time another chemical signal cues oviposition. Propyl-cysteine-sulfoxide has been shown to induce egg-laying in the leek moth and could be involved in host plant selection as a characteristic signal of ''Allium.''Host plant preference
Larvae feed on plants of the genus Allium, including:Allium cepa – onionAllium sativum – garlicAllium porrum – leekAllium ampeloprasum – elephant garlicAllium cepa var. aggregatum – shallotAllium schoenoprasum –chiveAllium cernuum – nodding onionAllium stellatum – prairie onionThe leek moth prefers A. sativum, garlic, A. porrum, leek, and A. cepa, onion, to other species of Allium.
Oviposition
Oviposition takes place in three behavioral stages: slow walking, pausing, and egg-laying. When given the choice between plants of the same species and of different sizes, females choose to lay their eggs on the larger plant.Life cycle
Development time from egg to adult is variable depending on temperature, generally ranging from 3 weeks at higher temperatures to 6 weeks at lower temperatures. Likewise, the number of generations possible each year depends on local climate conditions. Whereas three or more generations can typically be completed in Ontario, France, and Poland, only two can be completed in Sweden.Adults emerge in the spring and lay eggs within 10 days of adulthood. Eggs are laid on the leaves of the larval host plant, into which first instar larvae mine and subsequently complete five instars, reaching a length of 13–14 mm when mature. Larvae are light yellow-green in color with a brownish-yellow head. After reaching maturity, fifth instar larvae emerge from the host plant and spin a cocoon, on the host plant or nearby. Cocoons are white in color, pupa reddish-brown. If daylengths during previous larval stages are shorter than 15 hours, emergent adults will enter diapause to overwinter. Otherwise, adults lay another generation of eggs.
Predators
Knowledge of the leek moth's natural predators in North America is limited, but several larval and pupal parasitoids of the species have been documented in Europe. Parasitoids lay their eggs within or attached to the body of the host, the parasitoid larvae ultimately killing the host. Parasitoids are shown to parasitize the leek moth to a greater extent when leek moth populations are large and in early leek moth generations, suggesting that parasitism is less significant in smaller populations and in later generations. The leek moth is most vulnerable to parasitism in its pupal stage when it is no longer protected by the interior of its host plant.Diadromus pulchellus, a host-specific parasitoid of the leek moth, has been introduced in the Ottawa region in Canada as a biological control method for the invasive moth.