B. helichrysi

Brachycaudus helichrysi (Kaltenbach, 1843)

Leaf-curling plum aphid

Brachycaudus helichrysi : adulte aptère
Brachycaudus helichrysi : adulte ailé
Brachycaudus helichrysi : colonie
Brachycaudus helichrysi : dégât sur tournesol

Morphological characters

1.1-2.2 mm.
Apterous: pale green, tarsi black, cornicles short and conical.
Alate: yellowish green, large brown dorsal spot, antennae short and dark, cornicles short and pigmented, cauda short.

See identification file

Life cycles

Dioecious holocyclic, anholocyclic in temperate regions.

Primary hosts: Prunus spp (plum, peach, apricot).
Secondary hosts: Asteraceae: Cynara (artichoke), Tragopogon (salsify), Cichorium (chicory), Cultivated Asteraceae: Helianthus (sunflower), Chrysanthemum (chrysanthemum) or wild species; Borraginaceae: Myosotis (forget-me-not) etc.; Fabaceae: Trifolium (clover) and so on.

Particular characteristics

Agronomic impact

Brachycaudus helichrysi is a significant pest on Prunus, on crops of sunflower and also in the greenhouse production of chrysanthemums. The toxic effect of its saliva causes crinkling of the foliage (photo: apical part of a sunflower plant).
It is also harmful to artichoke capitula. It colonizes the underside of leaves, leads to blemishes on the bracts, induces hardening and reddening of those bracts which leads in turn to the formation of appearance of a waxy film.
The species transmits some viruses that depend on the non-persistent mode, such as cucumber mosaic virus (CMV).

Predators

Parasitoids

In this folder

Modification date : 07 February 2023 | Publication date : 28 September 2010 | Redactor : Evelyne Turpeau, Maurice Hullé, Bernard Chaubet