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Original Articles

Alipumilio (Diptera: Syrphidae) fly association with Burseraceae tree resins in the eastern Brazilian Amazon

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Pages 1941-1947 | Accepted 25 Apr 2003, Published online: 04 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

Numerous fly (Diptera) larvae develop in plant saps or rotting exudates, but few have adapted to resin flows of trees. Among these are some primitive syrphid genera (Syrphidae), Cheilosia in the temperate region and Alipumilio in the neotropics. A recent study of resin harvest in the eastern Brazilian Amazon has revealed a potentially new species of Alipumilio that develops in resin lumps on some species of Burseraceae trees. These resin flows are primarily stimulated by larvae of a bark-boring Sternocoelus weevil (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). This fly larva's morphology, movement in the resin and unsuccessful rearing apart from fresh resin indicate it may be consuming microbial spores or sap materials coming out of tree wounds. While Sternocoelus weevils are found in resin lumps in a range of Protium and other Burseraceae species in the region, Alipumilio larvae were only found in the resin of some of these species. The study speculates that some trees do not support Alipumilio because their resin's chemical properties are inhospitable to these larvae or inhibit the micro-organisms that they feed on.

Acknowledgements

We thank the following people who helped with field work and identification of specimens: Xarope, Livindo, Bubute, Raimundinho, and Xina'i Tembé, Aloisio, Lourival, and Luciano Munduruku, Xu'i and Geraldo Ka'apor, Bruce Hoeft, Haley Mitchell, James Lockman, Dr William Overal, Dr Graham Rotheray, Dr B. A. Foote, Dr Charles O'Brien, and botanists from the Museu Paraense Emilío Goeldi in Belém, Brazil. Post-field work assistance was provided by Dr James Finley, Dr James Marden, Dr Joe Kiesecker, Dr Douglas Daly, Dr F. Christian Thompson, Dr Norman Whitten, Frank von Willert and an anonymous reviewer. was prepared by Tom Nagel and is reproduced with permission from Forest Chemicals Review. This work was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, Rainforest Alliance Kleinhans Fellowship, the Food, Conservation and Health Foundation and the Hotchkiss School Students for Environmental Concern.

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