On the senior authorship of Musca oleae (Diptera: Tephritidae)

Zootaxa ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 1714 (1) ◽  
pp. 67 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALFIO RASPI ◽  
GENNARO VIGGIANI

The olive fruit fly is among the most serious pests of olive in the Mediterranean Basin and in 1998 the fly invaded North America, where the invasion was rapid and troublesome, mainly in California (Collier and Steenwyk, 2003).

PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (9) ◽  
pp. e0256284
Author(s):  
Tânia Nobre

The olive fruit fly, specialized to become monophagous during several life stages, remains the most important olive tree pest with high direct production losses, but also affecting the quality, composition, and inherent properties of the olives. Thought to have originated in Africa is nowadays present wherever olive groves are grown. The olive fruit fly evolved to harbor a vertically transmitted and obligate bacterial symbiont -Candidatus Erwinia dacicola- leading thus to a tight evolutionary history between olive tree, fruit fly and obligate, vertical transmitted symbiotic bacterium. Considering this linkage, the genetic diversity (at a 16S fragment) of this obligate symbiont was added in the understanding of the distribution pattern of the holobiont at nine locations throughout four countries in the Mediterranean Basin. This was complemented with mitochondrial (four mtDNA fragments) and nuclear (ten microsatellites) data of the host. We focused on the previously established Iberian cluster for the B. oleae structure and hypothesised that the Tunisian samples would fall into a differentiated cluster. From the host point of view, we were unable to confirm this hypothesis. Looking at the symbiont, however, two new 16S haplotypes were found exclusively in the populations from Tunisia. This finding is discussed in the frame of host-symbiont specificity and transmission mode. To understand olive fruit fly population diversity and dispersion, the dynamics of the symbiont also needs to be taken into consideration, as it enables the fly to, so efficiently and uniquely, exploit the olive fruit resource.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Varikou

Abstract B. oleae is considered the most important pest of cultivated olives, Olea europaea L., in many of the areas of the Mediterranean basin, affecting the quality and quantity of both olive oil and table olives (Michelakis and Neuenschwander, 1983; Manousis and Moore, 1987; Economopoulos, 2002). Unlike the fruits attacked by most other Bactrocera spp., olives containing larvae of B. oleae are frequently included in the harvested crop and subsequent oil production.


1968 ◽  
Vol 8 (32) ◽  
pp. 309 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Knight

The seasonal yields of twenty-seven introduced cultivars of Dactylis glomerata were compared under irrigation with Australian cultivars and ecotypes from the Mediterranean basin. Very large differences in winter yield were obtained between cultivars, some French ones having yields three times larger than those from continental climates in Europe and North America. The material in the trial was also assessed for heading date and a range of three months was obtained between the earliest and latest cultivars, with the French cultivars as a group being the earliest. Survival of the introduced cultivars was low over the summer when not irrigated, emphasizing the need for hybridization with drought resistant material.


The goal of this chapter is to present the current state and technologies with regards to interconnections of islands to the mainland or between islands. The majority of islands interconnections have been recorded in Asia, although the longest projects are found in Europe. In Asia, the islands are usually located close to the shore 10-55 km or in island complexes such as Indonesia and Philippines where the enhancement of the national grids through interconnections with then neighboring islands is relatively easy achieved through short HVAC links. In Europe, longer projects are observed exceeding the 400 km mainly in the Mediterranean basin, while the new HVDC interconnections are expected to reach even longer lengths. In North America, only a few island interconnections have been implemented in close distances from the shore. The main driver to interconnect islands has been principally the requirement to access cheap energy sources usually located in the mainland.


2007 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 407-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia Chueca ◽  
Helga Montón ◽  
José Luís Ripollés ◽  
Pedro Castañera ◽  
Enrique Moltó ◽  
...  

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