Publications by authors named "Giacomo Ortis"

Article Synopsis
  • * They cause significant economic and ecological damage both by burrowing into plants and carrying harmful pathogens.
  • * This study provides a comprehensive list of host plants for 2,193 scolytine species across 16 tribes, essential for improving monitoring strategies to prevent the introduction of new invasive species.
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Article Synopsis
  • The EFSA Panel on Plant Health conducted an assessment of non-EU Scolytinae species that affect non-coniferous plants in the EU, highlighting 5220 relevant species out of an initial 6495.
  • These beetles primarily target weakened or dead trees, with behaviors ranging from monogamous to polygynous mating systems, and many species are associated with fungi that help them weaken their hosts.
  • A database was created documenting host plants, feeding habits, geographic distribution, and climate types, ultimately identifying 88 species that significantly impact plant health, categorized by their level of threat.
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Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses various tribes of beetles (Scolytinae) that feed on different plant materials, causing damage to host plants and potentially spreading harmful pathogens that can lead to plant death.
  • It highlights the significance of the international trade in plants and wood as a means of introducing non-native beetle species that can threaten ecosystems and agriculture.
  • The paper aims to enhance pest risk assessment and monitoring strategies by providing a comprehensive and updated list of host plants and their economic uses for 2,139 species of these beetles.
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The egg parasitoid Ferrière is reported for the first time from sentinel eggs of two species of Tettigoniidae (Orthoptera), (Brunner von Wattenwyl) and (Fieber). In Italy, only two hosts of this parasitic wasp are known, one of which is a tettigoniid species. Exposure of sentinel eggs represented a useful method to detect new host associations of this parasitoid species that can search for their host's eggs in the ground.

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Xyleborini is the largest tribe of Scolytinae accounting for about 1300 species worldwide; all species are primarily xylomycetophagous, developing on symbiotic fungi farmed in plant woody tissues. Xyleborini wood-boring action, associated with the inoculum of symbiotic fungi, can lead, sometimes, to the emergence of host plant dieback, wood damage and death; for this reason, multiple Xyleborini are major pests on both cultivated, forest and ornamental trees. Many Xyleborini are invasive worldwide and great effort is expended to manage their biological invasions or prevent new arrivals.

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To face recurrent temperature changes, tettigoniids inhabiting temperate climates overwinter as eggs in a diapause stage, being able to postpone embryogenesis for one or more years. To date, it is unclear if species living in warm regions, especially under the Mediterranean climate, could exhibit a diapause for a single year or enter a prolonged diapause due to higher summer temperatures experienced by eggs immediately after oviposition. In this two-year study, we tested the effect of summer temperatures on diapause of six Mediterranean tettigoniid species under natural field conditions.

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Although outbreaks of rare species are unusual, several insect species have become emerging pests probably due to the ongoing environmental changes. Barbitistes vicetinus was first described in 1993 as an endemic bush-cricket of north-east Italy and was considered rare until 2008, when it became an established pest, causing severe damages to forests and crops. The possible role of temperature in changing its life cycle has still to be fully understood.

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Insect outbreaks usually involve important ecological and economic consequences for agriculture and forestry. The short-winged bush-cricket Barbitistes vicetinus Galvagni & Fontana, 1993 is a recently described species that was considered rare until ten years ago, when unexpected population outbreaks causing severe defoliations across forests and crops were observed in north-eastern Italy. A genetic approach was used to analyse the origin of outbreak populations.

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