Rzeczywiście w bazach CABI występuje taki rekord.
No to trochę bardziej aktualne dane.
Serwis Informacyjny Ochrony Roślin
http://nike.piorin.gov.pl/phkn/pests/index.php?action=show&pest_id=287
[EDIT] Dodaję link do tego dokumentu w PDF-ie na stronach EPPO
http://www.eppo.org/QUARANTINE/insects/Viteus_vitifoliae/VITEVI_ds.pdf
Polska wersja jest nieczytelna natomiast angielska jest Ok.
Na dole strony w plikach do pobrania e-vitevi, trzeba kliknąć w znaczek worda.
EPPO quarantine pest Prepared by CABI and EPPO for the EU under Contract 90/399003
Data Sheets on Quarantine Pests
Viteus vitifoliae
IDENTITY
Name: Viteus vitifoliae (Fitch)
Synonyms: Daktulosphaira vitifoliae (Fitch)
Phylloxera vastatrix Planchon
Phylloxera vitifoliae (Fitch)
Taxonomic position: Insecta: Hemiptera: Homoptera: Phylloxeridae
Common names: Grapevine phylloxera, vine louse (English)
Phylloxéra de la vigne (French)
Reblaus (German)
Filoxera (Spanish)
Notes on taxonomy and nomenclature: The full life-cycle of V. vitifoliae on American Vitis spp. is a complex alternation between an aerial, leaf-feeding form, gallicolae, and the root-feeding form, radicicolae. On the European species V. vinifera, the radicicolae form predominates and the gallicolae form is virtually absent. The occurrence or non-occurrence of the gallicolae form also depends on several other factors, including vine cultivar and environment (Stevenson & Jubb, 1976).
Bayer computer code: VITEVI
EPPO A2 list: No. 106
EU Annex designation: II/A2 - as Daktulosphaira vitifoliae
HOSTS
The principal economic hosts are Vitis spp. There are large differences in tolerance or resistance between species: V. vinifera is extremely susceptible to attack by the radicicolae form but the leaves are resistant, whereas the American species V. riparia withstands extensive galling of the leaves but is resistant to root attack. V. riparia is therefore widely used in interspecific hybrid rootstock production. Other American species are resistant (V. rupestris, V. berlandieri) or susceptible (V. labrusca, V. aestivalis) to damage.
V. vinifera is now widely grown throughout the EPPO region, but is generally grafted to American rootstocks and is therefore resistant to V. vitifoliae.
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
V. vitifoliae is native to North America and was introduced into Europe in the latter part of the 19th century. It has continued to spread throughout the 20th century.
EPPO region: Algeria, Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece (but not Crete), Hungary, Israel, Italy, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, Moldova, Morocco, Portugal, Romania, Russia (southern), Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, UK (recently introduced into England; distribution very restricted), Ukraine, Yugoslavia.
Asia: Armenia, Azerbaijan, China (north), Georgia, India, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Korea Democratic People's Republic, Korea Republic, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey.
Africa: Algeria, Morocco, South Africa, Tunisia, Zimbabwe.
North America: Bermuda, Canada (British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario), Mexico, USA (Arkansas, Arizona, California, Connecticut, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington).
Central America and Caribbean: Panama.
South America: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela.
Oceania: Australia (New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria), New Zealand.
EU: Present.
Distribution map: See CIE (1975, No. 339).
Masz może Doktorku dojście do oryginału tekstu? w CABI jest tylko abstrakt.