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首页> 外文期刊>Biological Control: Theory and Application in Pest Management >Consumptive and non-consumptive effects of predatory arthropods on billbug (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae) pests in turfgrass
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Consumptive and non-consumptive effects of predatory arthropods on billbug (Coleoptera: Dryophthoridae) pests in turfgrass

机译:掠食性节肢动物对草坪草(鞘翅目:Drowophthoridae)害虫的消费和非消耗效应

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摘要

Generalist predators affect pest populations through direct consumption or by non-consumptive effects, whereby predators induce changes in prey behavior which represent a cost to prey. A diverse community of predatory arthropods has been described in turfgrass, contributing to the direct mortality of pests including black cutworm, fall armyworm, and Japanese beetle. Billbugs are a major pest of turfgrass in the Intermountain West, but the composition of the local predatory arthropod community and whether predators aid in billbug suppression through consumptive or non-consumptive effects is unknown. First, we catalogued the predatory arthropod community on Utah and Idaho golf courses using linear pitfall traps. Then, we assessed adult billbug consumption by resident predators in the field. Using a series of lab assays, we assessed the most abundant predators' consumption of billbug life stages, including adults, sentinel waxworm larvae at varied soil depths, and eggs in turf stems. Finally, we assessed the non-consumptive effects of these abundant predators on adult billbug activity (mating, oviposition, thanatosis). We found that the predatory arthropod community consisted primarily of carabids (Pterostichus melanarius, Harpalus sp., Amara aenea, and Anisodactylus sp.) and spiders (lycosids), representing 60% and 28% of all predators, respectively. In the field and in lab assays, adult billbug mortality from predation was generally low at & 6%. While predators readily consumed sentinel larvae in petri dish arenas, larvae escaped predation at 1 cm soil depth. The greatest consumptive effects of predators were on billbug eggs, with Anisodactlylus sp. feeding on 46% of eggs. Predator exposure reduced overall billbug activity by 56%, and for hunting billbugs, specifically, reduced mating activity by 28%. Our new understanding of the consumptive and non-consumptive effects of predators on billbugs supports the importance of conservation biocontrol in turfgrass and assists in planning for enhancement of specific predators.
机译:通用捕食者通过直接消费或非消耗效果影响害虫群体,从而捕食者诱导代表猎物成本的猎物行为的变化。 Turefgrass描述了一种不同的掠食性节肢动物群落,有助于害虫的直接死亡,包括黑色褐色虫,秋季虫和日本甲虫。 Billbugs是Turfgrass在Westmountain West中的主要害虫,而是当地掠夺性节肢动物群落的组成以及通过消费或非消费效果的掠夺者抑制的掠夺者抑制是未知的。首先,我们编制了使用线性缺陷陷阱的犹他州和爱达荷州高尔夫球场的掠夺性节肢动物社区。然后,我们评估了该领域中的居民捕食者的成人清单消费。使用一系列实验室测定,我们评估了最丰富的掠夺者消费比例生命阶段,包括成年人,在不同土壤深度的哨兵蜡幼虫,草皮茎中的鸡蛋。最后,我们评估了这些丰富的捕食者对成年Billbug活性的非消耗效果(交配,产卵,同言)。我们发现掠夺性节肢动物群落主要由Carabids(Pterostichus melanarius,Harpalus Sp.,Amara Aenea和Anisodactylus sp.)和蜘蛛(番糖苷),分别为所有捕食者的60%和28%。在现场和实验室测定中,从捕食中的成人Billbug死亡率通常低于& ; 6%。虽然捕食者在培养皿中易于消耗哨兵幼虫,但幼虫在1厘米的土壤深度逸出。捕食者的最大消耗效果在Billbug卵中,含有Anisodactlylus sp。喂食46%的鸡蛋。捕食者暴露将整体比例活动减少56%,具体而言,狩猎比例,将交配活性减少28%。我们对捕食者对Billbugs捕食者的消耗和非消耗效果的新认识支持TurfGrass中保护生物控制的重要性,并有助于提高特定捕食者的规划。

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