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multiflora rose biological control


19 Images

Rae Chambers
Pennsylvania State University

wood block


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

Irregular reddening of leaf caused by rose rosette disease


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

bright red shoots emerging in the spring


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

Witches' broom of rose rosette disease (yellow stems), heavily affected by powdery mildew


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

symptomatic inflorescence (red pannicle, accompanied by normal flowers on healthy foliage (a separate plant)


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

diseased stem on left with an enlarged thorny stem; normal stem and flower on right


Anatomy Department Archive
West Virginia University

ventral surface near head end as seen by the Scanning Electron Microscope; the mite is about 50 microns wide at the genital coverflap


Anatomy Department Archive
West Virginia University

dorsal shield of female showing the distinctive pattern that identifies this mite as seen by the Scanning Electron Microscope


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

dorsal shield of female as seen in the light microscope, using phase contrast microscopy


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

three females in a dissecting tray; the left female is about 2 mm long


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

hypanthia or hips


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

A dissected hip: the soft fruit shell is on the right (typical of mid-November), five normal-sized seed are at the upper left, and three "dwarf" seed, representing unpollinated ovules at the lower left; note the abundant, sharply tapered fibers that are always present in the hip; they irritate the digestive tract of song birds, causing the seed to move quickly through the gut (in just a few hours).


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

ovipositing female, inserting her ovipositor near the edge of the dried inflorescence


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

dissected seeds showing larvae and a pupa that were inside (May)


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

a mating pair on a leaflet (May); the male is the smaller, upper beetle


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

girdled cane caused by larva (August); the oviposition site is at the right edge of the girdle; the cane will probably die distal to the girdle


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

a "flag" caused by the break of a cane at the girdle (August)


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

close up of girdle and broken cane


James W. Amrine Jr.
West Virginia University

map of known distribution in the USA