common name: a ground beetle
scientific name: Calleida decora (Fabricius) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Carabidae)

Introduction - Synonymy - Distribution - Description - Biology - Economic Importance - Survey and Detection - Selected References

Introduction

Calleida decora (Fabricius) is a small arboreal ground beetle, predaceous both as larva and adult. Common on various cultivated crops, it is apparently the only carabid to complete its larval development on Florida soybean foliage (Neal 1974). It is believed to be a major factor in suppression of several lepidopterous pests, e.g., velvetbean caterpillar, Anticarsia gemmatalis Hübner, on soybeans.

Synonymy

Erwin et al. (1977) listed synonyms:

C. cordicollis Putzeys,
C. cyanoptera LeConte, and
C. coeruleipennis Gemminger & Harold.

Distribution

Calleida decora is reported from the southeastern United States, extending into the Midwest, Baja California, Mexico, and Belize (Erwin et al. 1977).

Description

Adults: The adults are slender, 7 to 10 mm long, 2.5 to 3.5 mm wide. Head and elytra are green or blue-black, thorax and legs yellowish-red with tips of femora and tarsi dark. Antennae are dark with three or four basal segments lighter.

adult

Males have a double row of papillate hairs on the undersurface of the first three protarsal segments and first two metatarsal segments (appearing white), but female tarsi are pubescent (straw-colored) (Horn 1882, McWhorter et al. 1984).

Eggs: The eggs are round, white, semi-opaque, approximately 0.75 mm in diameter, covered with sand particles, and attached by a silken thread to a leaf or other available surface such as a stem or twig.

eggs

Larvae: The larvae are active, black, campodeiform (in early stages having no abdominal appendages except cerci), with yellowish-red head capsules. Larvae are approximately 1.5 mm long at hatching and may grow to 10 mm total body length prior to pupation. Mean head capsule widths for the three larval instars are 0.60, 0.90, and 1.23 mm respectively.

larva

Pupae: The pupae are white, exarate and approximately 5 mm long. The pupal cell is usually constructed ca. 7 to 15 mm beneath the soil surface (Hasse 1971).

pupa

Biology

Caged adult females live an average of 230 days with a mean preovipositional period of 11 days and lay an average of 800 eggs (McWhorter et al. 1984). While an egg is still held by the abdominal tip, the female covers it with sand or dust particles, and binds it with silken thread to form a purse. The "egg purse" is attached to a leaf by a silken thread. Developmental times at 22 to 28°C for eggs, larvae, and pupae are approximately four to six, 12 to 18, and four to six days, respectively (McWhorter et al. 1984; unpublished data 1973, 1982). Larvae are predaceous except while undergoing sclerotization following hatching and molting (McWhorter et al. 1984). They are highly cannibalistic and must be reared in individual containers. They feed readily on lepidopterous eggs as well as small larvae.

Economic Importance

On soybeans, populations were estimated as high as 5400/ha in Gadsden County, Florida (Neal 1974) and 9600/ha in Alachua County, Florida (Elvin 1983). C. decora adults and larvae have been observed feeding on velvetbean caterpillar, A. gemmatalis Hübner; cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni Hübner; soybean looper, Pseudoplusia includens (Walker); and other lepidopterous larvae (Whitcomb and Bell 1964; McCarty et al. 1980; McWhorter et al. 1984; unpublished data 1973, 1982).

Over 10% of the total insect predation (almost 20% during one season) of A. gemmatalis larvae (1st to 4th instar) artificially placed on soybean foliage was by C. decora. Of the 21 predation observations involving C. decora during a total of four seasons, 19 were by larvae and two by adults (Elvin 1983; unpublished data 1974). Adult C. decora, confined in small field cages on potted soybeans, consumed an average of 6.4 small (1st to 3rd instar) P. includens larvae/24 hr (Richman et al. 1980).

Survey and Detection

Larval and adult populations on crops may be sampled by direct observation or examination, vacuum sampling, sweeping, shaking, or beating of the foliage. This species should not be confused with destructive leaf beetles of similar size and coloration.

Selected References


Authors: D.L. Harris, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry; R.C. Hemenway Jr. and W.H. Whitcomb, University of Florida
Originally published as DPI Entomology Circular 278. Updated for this publication.
Photographs: Lyle Buss, University of Florida; and Shepard, Journal of Agricultural Entomology
Project Coordinator: Thomas R. Fasulo, University of Florida
Publication Number: EENY-331
Publication Date: July 2004. Latest revision: October 2011.
Copyright 2004-2011 University of Florida

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