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![]() Home | General | Morphology | Tachinid Times | Bibliography | Arnaud (1978) | CNC Types | Checklist N. Amer. Tachinidae World Genera of Tachinidae | Manual of Nearctic Diptera | Bertha Armyworm | Choristoneura species
The bertha armyworm, Mamestra configurata Walker, is a native North American species of noctuid moth ranging from Manitoba to British Columbia and south to Mexico (Crumb 1956). It was originally a feeder on native prairie plants but became a significant crop pest on the Canadian prairies in the 1920s, particularly on flax, sweet clover and alfalfa (King 1928). The bertha armyworm feeds on a wide variety of cultivated broadleaved plants but in recent decades has become of particular concern as a major pest of rapeseed and canola crops (Brassica napus L. and Brassica rapa L.) (Turnock 1984). Periodic outbreaks, most recently in 1994-1996, have caused significant economic losses to the agri-food industry (Mason et al. 1998). Information on the biology and pest status of the bertha armyworm can be found in papers by King (1928, 1929), Wylie and Bucher (1977), Turnock and Philip (1977), and Turnock (1984).
The primary purpose of these web pages is to provide provincial entomologists, biocontrol researchers and other non-specialists on the Tachinidae with the means to identify adult tachinids reared from bertha armyworm. To achieve this aim, these pages summarize what is known about the tachinid parasitoids of bertha armyworm and provides information on adult recognition, biology and distribution. First published on the Internet in 1998 |