
(An electronic reprint of Entomology Notes #20, copyright Michigan
Entomological Society)
The most common acorn insects are the acorn weevils which are 1/2 inch long and have snouts with small, saw like teeth. There are two types, or genera: the long-snouted acorn weevils (genus Curculio, Fig. 1) and the short-snouted ones (genus Conotrachelus, Fig. 2). The longsnouted acorn weevil's snout may be equal to or greater than the length of its body. The short-snouted weevil's snout is one-half or less than its body length.
Adults of both genera feed on acorns, but only the long snouted
weevils can chew or drill into the shells to feed on the meat
inside. They also generally feed on acorns still attached to oak
trees. Short-snouted weevils bite off bits of acorn meat from
between cracks in the shells of acorns lying on the forest floor.
After eating their fill, females often lay eggs in the acorns
on which they've fed. Long-snouted females lay their eggs in the
holes drilled into acorns during feeding, but short snouted females
lay eggs between cracks in the acorn shells.
Legless, grub-like acorn weevil larvae (Fig. 3) hatch from eggs
a few days after they are laid. There may be one to several acorn
weevil larvae in each acorn. Larvae typi cally go through five
growth stages, or instars. Each instar ends with the molt or shedding
of the old skin, providing the larva with mor, e room to grow.
After a few weeks, larvae chew their way out of the acorn, burrow
into the soil to pupate, and eventually emerge as adults in 1
or more years. Short-snouted larvae usually exit from a single
hole that already exists in the acorn (Fig. 4), but long-snouted
larvae may chew their own exit hole through the acorn shell. Like
larvae of the short-snouted acorn weevil, acorn moth larvae (Fig.
5) can feed only on damaged or sprouting acorns. The grayish female
acorn moths (Fig. 6) lay eggs in damaged acorns, sometimes in
the emergence holes of acorn weevil larvae. It's easy to distinguish
the acorn moth larva, a caterpillar, from acorn weevil larvae.
The acorn moth larva has three pairs of legs near the head and
is generally longer than the legless, fat larvae of acorn weevils.
Larvae of the acorn moth feed on acorns and probably on the fungi
that often grow in damaged acorns. They usually pupate inside
the acorns.
The filbertworm, a moth whose larvae closely resemble the acorn
moth, is also often found in acoms. Unlike the acorn moth, which
usually attacks acorns on the ground, the filbertworm attacks
developing acorns on the trees.
Gall wasps are some of the oldest known acorn eaters. Fossil gall
wasps, thousands of years old, have been found in acorns from
the famous La Brea Tar Pits of California. Adult females lay their
eggs in female flowers of oaks in the spring, which causes galls,
abnormal growths of plant tissue, to develop in or on the acorn.
Gall wasp larvae live in and feed on the plant tissue inside the
galls. The acorn plum gall (Fig. 7) is quite conspicuous. It is
a blood-red globe about an inch in diameter that is attached to
the acorn cup. Many of these external galls drop off the acorns
in the autumn. Other galls are inconspicuous and can be found
only by opening acorns and examining the contents. Inter nal galls
usually consist of small, stony cells ernbedded in the acorn meat
(Fig. 8). While gall wasps usually do not cause extensive damage
to acorns, in 1989, the pip gall wasp, a serious pest in some
years, destroyed millions of acorns in Pennsylvania.
To locate acorn insects to study, you must find infested acorns,
which is not necessarily an easy task. Collect some acorns and
place them in a large container of water. Those acorns that float
above the water's surface often contain insects. Those that sink
or float beneath the surface are usually sound. Another, more
crude method, requires bouncing acorns from about 2 feet onto
a hard surface, such as a table. Acorns that bounce are usually
sound; those that contain insects often fall flat. Divide the
acorns into two groups, the floaters and sinkers or bouncers and
non bouncers. Then carefully open them and see whether or not
they contain insects. You will probably locate acorn wee vils,
the most common acorn insects. Keep a tally of the numbers and
kinds of insects you ffnd. Try comparing the float and bounce
methods to see which is the more accurate method to detect insect-infested
acorns.
Rearing acorn weevil adults from larvae is easy. Make a wooden
frame from narrow strips of wood, staple coarse wire mesh to the
bottom of the frame, and place the frame over a shallow pan or
greenhouse flat filled with moist potting soil or vermiculite.
Place infested acorns in the frame and keep the rearing containers
at 65° to 75° F. After a week or so, acorn weevil larvae
may emerge and drop into the pan below the frame. You can collect
the larvae from the soil's surface, or you may have to sift the
pan's contents.
Acorn weevil larvae may burrow down 8 inches into the soil to
pupate, so you will need deep containers such as l gallon plastic
milk jugs to house your insects. Carefully cut off the tops of
the jugs with a pair of scissors, but leave the handles attached
for easy lifting. Fill the jugs two-thirds full with an equal
mixture of sand and potting soil. (Sand alone will also work quite
well.) Place the larvae on the surface and watch them burrow in.
Water the jugs regularly to keep the soil moist, so the larvae
will not desiccate.
Short-snouted weevil adults may begin to emerge in 6 to 8 weeks.
Long-snouted weevils, depending upon the species, take several
months to emerge. Parasitic wasps may also emerge. If no adults
emerge, disease may have killed them. Provide the emerged adults
with cracked acorns (collected in the fall and refrigerated) and
watch them feed.
Keep the acorns from which your acorn weevil larvae have emerged.
Place these acorns in different habitats such as a lawn and a
forest, and leave them for a few weeks. The weevil emergence holes
will provide entrances into the acorns for small animals. Collect
the acorns and see what small animals are living inside. You may
find ants, centipedes, millipedes, mites, snails, beetles, and
fly larvae. Do the types of animals you find differ with habitat?
Try collecting acorns that appear to have been on the ground for
some time and see who's home. The types and numbers of animals
usually change with time, a process called succession.
There are lots of other experiments you can do with acorns and
their insects; have fun thinking them up and doing them. For more
information on oaks, acorns, and acorn insects, consult the following:
Felt, E. P. 1940. Plant galls and gall makers. Ithaca, NY: Comstock
Publ. Co., 364 p.
Johnson, W. C. and C. S. Adkisson.1986. Air-lifting the oaks.
Natural History. October, pp. 40-47.
Moffett, M. W. 1989. Life in a nutshell. National Geographic.
June, pp. 783-796.
Peattie, D. C.1950. A natural history of trees of eastern and
central North America. Boston, MA: Houghton MiMin Co., 606 p.
Williams, C. E.1989. Checklist of North American nut infesting
insects and host plants. Journal of Entomological Science. 24:
550-562.