Intraguild aggressiveness between an alien and a native predatory mite
View/Open
Author
Escudero-Colomar, L.A.
Creus, E.
Chorąży, A.
Walzer, A.
Publication date
2019-11-07ISSN
1362-1971
Abstract
The predatory mite Amblydromalus limonicus, non-native in Europe, can be used legally in several European countries as greenhouse biocontrol agent against thrips species, although this species is also able to feed on whiteflies and gall mites. The first record of the unintended occurrence of A. limonicus in apple orchards in Europe comes from Catalonia (Spain), where A. limonicus is well established in the native predatory mite community since 2011. The dominant species in this community is Amblyseius andersoni, which has a similar life-style as A. limonicus (large, aggressive predator with broad diet range) making intraguild (IG) interactions between the two predators likely. Thus, we tested the IG aggressiveness of native and alien female predators, when provided with IG prey (larvae). Alien females of A. limonicus proved to be highly aggressive IG predators against native larvae of A. andersoni, which were attacked earlier and more frequently than alien larvae by the native predator. Nearly all attacks by the alien predator resulted in the death of native IG prey, whereas about 10% of the alien intraguild prey escaped the attacks of the native predator. Additionally, native IG prey is smaller than alien prey, which should facilitate the overwhelming by the alien predator. We argue that the strong aggressive intraguild behavior of A. limonicus is contributing to its establishment success in the native predatory mite community.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Accepted version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
632 - Plant damage, injuries. Plant diseases. Pests, organisms injurious to plants. Plant protection
Pages
16
Publisher
Systematic and Applied Acarology Society London
Is part of
Systematic and Applied Acarology
Citation
L.A., Escudero-Colomar, Creus E., Chorąży A., and Walzer A. 2019. "Intraguild Aggressiveness Between An Alien And A Native Predatory Mite". Systematic And Applied Acarology 24 (11): 2094-2105. Systematic and Applied Acarology Society. doi:10.11158/saa.24.11.5.
Grant agreement number
MINECO/Programa Estatal de fomento de la investigación científica y técnica de excelencia/AGL2013-49164-C2-2-R/ES/Control Integrado de Plagas en Cultivos Hortofrutícolas/
Program
Protecció Vegetal Sostenible
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [2336]
Rights
Copyright © Systematic & Applied Acarology Society
The following license files are associated with this item: