<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="1"?>
<pra datepubli="2022-06-21" lastupdate="2023-01-13">
 <uuid>265fc14b-fb27-4d9b-9477-4486f1a76271</uuid>
 <country>EU</country>
 <datepra>2022-05-17</datepra>
 <title>Pest categorisation of Platypus apicalis</title>
 <description><![CDATA[<p>The EFSA Panel on Plant Health performed a pest categorisation of <em>Platypus apicalis</em> (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Platypodinae), an ambrosia beetle, also known as a pinhole borer, for the EU territory.&nbsp;</p><p><em>P. apicalis</em> is a polyphagous pest native to New Zealand. The majority of its life cycle is spent inside tree wood, but it does not directly feed on plant tissue, instead larvae and adults feed on a symbiotic fungus (<em>Sporothrix nothofagi</em> which is pathogenic to <em>Nothofagus</em> spp.) vectored by adults and introduced when they bore tunnels into the host.&nbsp;</p><p><em>P. apicalis</em> feeds within a wide range of live, often stressed trees, in dead or dying hardwood and softwood trees, and fallen or felled trees. Successful reproduction can occur inside a number of living tree species including <em>Castanea sativa, Pinus</em> spp. and <em>Ulmus</em> spp. <em>P. apicalis</em> is not known to have established outside of New Zealand although findings have been reported in Australia.&nbsp;</p><p>Whilst there are no records of interceptions of this species in the EU, platypodines are intercepted with solid wood packing material (SWPM) and <em>Platypus</em> species, but not <em>P. apicalis</em>, have been intercepted with wooden logs in Japan. Host plants for planting also provide a potential pathway.&nbsp;</p><p>Hosts are grown widely across the EU in areas with climates comparable to those in New Zealand where the pest occurs suggesting that conditions in the EU are suitable for its establishment. If introduced into the EU, adults could disperse naturally by flight, perhaps tens or hundreds of metres. The movement of infested wood and host plants for planting within the EU could facilitate spread.&nbsp;</p><p>Economic impacts in forestry and timber industries would result from the galleries created by <em>P. apicalis</em> and from wood staining caused by the symbiotic fungus. Phytosanitary measures are available to inhibit the entry of <em>P. apicalis</em>.&nbsp;</p><p><em>P. apicalis</em> satisfies the criteria that are within the remit of EFSA to assess for it to be regarded as a potential Union quarantine pest.</p>]]></description>
 <author id="49">
  <fullname>Virag  Kertesz (EFSA)</fullname>
  <institute id="8">European Food Safety Authority</institute>
 </author>
 <tags>
  <tag>ambrosia beetles</tag>
  <tag>categorization</tag>
  <tag>plants for planting</tag>
  <tag>polyphagous</tag>
  <tag>wood</tag>
  <tag>wood packaging</tag>
 </tags>
 <organisms>
  <organism eppocode="PLTPAP">Platypus apicalis</organism>
 </organisms>
 <hosts>
  <host eppocode="ACADA">Acacia dealbata</host>
  <host eppocode="ACAME">Acacia melanoxylon</host>
  <host eppocode="ACRPP">Acer pseudoplatanus</host>
  <host eppocode="AGTAU">Agathis australis</host>
  <host eppocode="AITSE">Aristotelia serrata</host>
  <host eppocode="BETPE">Betula pendula</host>
  <host eppocode="CSNSA">Castanea sativa</host>
  <host eppocode="CDLAU">Cordyline australis</host>
  <host eppocode="PODDA">Dacrycarpus dacrydioides</host>
  <host eppocode="DADCU">Dacrydium cupressinum</host>
  <host eppocode="DOSKA">Diospyros kaki</host>
  <host eppocode="DYXSE">Dysoxylum spectabile</host>
  <host eppocode="1EUCG">Eucalyptus</host>
  <host eppocode="GIKBI">Ginkgo biloba</host>
  <host eppocode="1NOFG">Nothofagus</host>
  <host eppocode="NOFFU">Nothofagus fusca</host>
  <host eppocode="NOFME">Nothofagus menziesii</host>
  <host eppocode="NOFSO">Nothofagus solandri</host>
  <host eppocode="NOFTR">Nothofagus truncata</host>
  <host eppocode="PIEAB">Picea abies</host>
  <host eppocode="1PIUG">Pinus</host>
  <host eppocode="POPTC">Populus trichocarpa</host>
  <host eppocode="PSTME">Pseudotsuga menziesii</host>
  <host eppocode="QUERO">Quercus robur</host>
  <host eppocode="1RHUG">Rhus</host>
  <host eppocode="SAXRU">Salix x fragilis</host>
  <host eppocode="SEQSE">Sequoia sempervirens</host>
  <host eppocode="1ULMG">Ulmus</host>
  <host eppocode="WEIRA">Weinmannia racemosa</host>
 </hosts>
 <praarea>
  <area isocode="9L">EU</area>
 </praarea>
 <files>
  <file type="1" size="0">
   <title>link</title>
   <url>https://pra.eppo.int/getfile/750c8e51-bf8f-44f7-b69b-636907a78a93</url>
  </file>
 </files>
</pra>
