# A new defoliating threat to eucalyptus plantations: biology and foliar consumption of Physocleora dukinfeldia (Lepidoptera: Geometridae)

**Authors:** Paula Gregorini Silva, Aline Marques Pinheiro, Thais Lohaine Braga Santos, Laura Vilas Bôas Gianezi, Daniel Somma Araújo, Bruna Ferreira Anjos, Carlos Gilberto Raetano, Carlos Frederico Wilcken

PMC · DOI: 10.7717/peerj.20589 · PeerJ · 2026-01-12

## TL;DR

A new moth species, Physocleora dukinfeldia, is found to attack eucalyptus trees in Brazil, raising concerns about its potential impact on forestry.

## Contribution

This is the first detailed report on the life cycle and feeding behavior of Physocleora dukinfeldia on eucalyptus species.

## Key findings

- The insect completes its life cycle on both Eucalyptus urograndis and its native host Schinus terebinthifolia.
- Development time is longer and pupal viability is lower on Eucalyptus urograndis compared to the native host.
- Larval survival is low on both hosts, but nearly one-third reach adulthood.

## Abstract

The defoliator Physocleora dukinfeldia Schaus 1897 (Lepidoptera: Geometridae) was recently reported attacking Eucalyptus urograndis (Myrtaceae) plantations in Brazil, raising concerns about its potential impact on commercial forestry. In this context, early characterization of pest biology plays a critical role in understanding host-use patterns and forecasting potential impacts on forest ecosystems. This study aimed to characterize the biology and foliar consumption of P. dukinfeldia on E. urograndis and its native host, Schinus terebinthifolia (Anacardiaceae), by recording molting, mortality, pupation, and emergence of imago, measuring larval head capsule width, pupal weight, and size, and calculating stage duration and viability under controlled conditions. The insect completed its life cycle on both host plants, with significantly longer development time and reduced pupal viability observed on E. urograndis. Although larval survival was low on both host species, nearly one-third of the individuals successfully reached adulthood. No significant differences in leaf consumption were detected between the two eucalyptus species evaluated in this study. These findings indicate that P. dukinfeldia has the biological capacity to adapt to eucalyptus and should be closely monitored in forest production areas. This is the first report to detail the life cycle and feeding behavior of this species on eucalyptus, providing critical baseline information for future pest management strategies.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Schinus terebinthifolia (taxon 169191)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Schinus terebinthifolia (Brazilian peppertree, species) [taxon 169191], Eucalyptus (genus) [taxon 3932], Eucalyptus grandis x Eucalyptus urophylla (species) [taxon 192399]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12805907/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12805907