Foraging abilities and competitive interactions between two egg parasitoids of bagrada bug in California.

IF 1.6 3区 农林科学 Q2 ENTOMOLOGY Bulletin of Entomological Research Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-08 DOI:10.1017/S0007485324000531
Evelyne Hougardy, D Valle Rogers, Brian N Hogg
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Abstract

Bagrada bug, Bagrada hilaris (Burmeister) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae), is an invasive pest of cole crops in the United States. Because it also feeds on widespread weeds and persists in natural habitats surrounding crop fields, conventional control strategies are often ineffective at providing long-term control. One egg parasitoid, Gryon aetherium Talamas (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae), is a promising biological control candidate because of its ability to parasitise B. hilaris buried eggs. Recently, adventive populations of G. aetherium were recovered from sentinel eggs in California along with a native egg parasitoid, Ooencyrtus californicus Girault (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae). A better understanding of these parasitoid species' spatial preference for foraging and their possible competitive interactions will help evaluate their host suppression potential. We compared the foraging abilities of these two parasitoid species for eggs deposited below and above ground. We also investigated the effect of interspecific competition on host suppression and the ability of O. californicus to parasitise eggs previously parasitised by G. aetherium. G. aetherium parasitised naturally and manually buried eggs, whereas O. californicus did not. In another experiment, O. californicus parasitised eggs glued to cards, but not in the presence of sand. Results suggest that G. aetherium may be negatively affected by the presence of O. californicus, and there was a slight but significant reduction in total host mortality when the parasitoids were present together. However, the inability of O. californicus to forage in soil likely limits negative interactions between these two species, and the two parasitoids may ultimately complement each other.

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加利福尼亚巴格拉达蝽两种卵类寄生蜂的觅食能力及竞争相互作用。
Bagrada hilaris(半翅目:蝽科)是美国油菜作物的一种入侵害虫。由于它还以广泛分布的杂草为食,并在农田周围的自然栖息地持续存在,传统的控制策略往往无法提供长期控制。其中一种卵寄生蜂(膜翅目:寄生蜂科)具有寄生于小蜂埋卵的能力,是一种很有前途的生物防治方法。最近,在加利福尼亚的哨兵卵中发现了外来的蜜蜂,同时还发现了一种原生的卵寄生蜂加州卵通蜂(oencyrtus californicus Girault)。更好地了解这些拟寄生物对觅食的空间偏好及其可能的竞争相互作用,将有助于评估它们对寄主的抑制潜力。我们比较了这两种寄生蜂对地上和地下卵的觅食能力。我们还研究了种间竞争对寄主抑制的影响,以及加州加州夜蛾寄生于先前被乙蚜寄生的卵的能力。乙etherium寄生在自然和人工掩埋的卵上,而加州夜蛾则没有。在另一项实验中,加州锥虫寄生在粘在卡片上的卵上,但没有沙子。结果表明,加州加州锥虫的存在可能会对乙etherium产生负面影响,当这些寄生蜂同时存在时,宿主的总死亡率会有轻微但显著的降低。然而,加州加利福尼亚州光虫无法在土壤中觅食可能限制了这两个物种之间的负面相互作用,两种拟寄生虫最终可能互补。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
160
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Established in 1910, the internationally recognised Bulletin of Entomological Research aims to further global knowledge of entomology through the generalisation of research findings rather than providing more entomological exceptions. The Bulletin publishes high quality and original research papers, ''critiques'' and review articles concerning insects or other arthropods of economic importance in agriculture, forestry, stored products, biological control, medicine, animal health and natural resource management. The scope of papers addresses the biology, ecology, behaviour, physiology and systematics of individuals and populations, with a particular emphasis upon the major current and emerging pests of agriculture, horticulture and forestry, and vectors of human and animal diseases. This includes the interactions between species (plants, hosts for parasites, natural enemies and whole communities), novel methodological developments, including molecular biology, in an applied context. The Bulletin does not publish the results of pesticide testing or traditional taxonomic revisions.
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