The data are the number and proportion of female weevils (Ceratapion basicorne) that oviposited after exposure to three different environmental hibernation conditions for three different durations (4, 8 and 11 weeks). The conditions were Greenhouse [ambient temperature and photoperiod], glass door Refrigerator [5°C and ambient photoperiod], and incubator [5°C and 24 h dark]).
These are results of a series of laboratory experiments to determine if topical application of methoprene and 20-ecdysone can terminate reproductive diapause of the weevil, Ceratapion basicorne, which is a recently permitted biological control agent of yellow starthistle (Centaurea solstitialis). Adult weevils feed on leaves, creating pin holes, and lay eggs inside leaves. Diapausing weevils were treated with various doses of methoprene (0, 0.01, 0.1, 1.0 micrograms) dissolved in acetone in experiments 1 and 2. They were treated sequentially first with acetone or 20-ecdysone (1.0 microgram) and then with methoprene (1.0 microgram) in experiment 3 and were treated with 20-ecdysone followed by methoprene in experiment 4.