Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality

Parasitoids feed commonly on honeydew. However, a high content of energy reserves in honeydew-fed parasitoids does not imply an increase of their fitness because honeydew may be relatively unsuitable. Herein, we studied the feeding behavior and fitness (longevity and fecundity) of a parasitoid, Aphy...

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Autores principales: Tena, Alejandro, Llácer, Elena, Urbaneja, Alberto
Formato: article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2017
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4568
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author Tena, Alejandro
Llácer, Elena
Urbaneja, Alberto
author_browse Llácer, Elena
Tena, Alejandro
Urbaneja, Alberto
author_facet Tena, Alejandro
Llácer, Elena
Urbaneja, Alberto
author_sort Tena, Alejandro
collection ReDivia
description Parasitoids feed commonly on honeydew. However, a high content of energy reserves in honeydew-fed parasitoids does not imply an increase of their fitness because honeydew may be relatively unsuitable. Herein, we studied the feeding behavior and fitness (longevity and fecundity) of a parasitoid, Aphytis melinus DeBach (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae), which host does not produce honeydew, when it had access to honeydew excreted by five common hemipterans in citrus: Aleurothrixus floccosus (Maskell) (Aleyrodidae), Aphis spiraecola Patch (Aphididae), Coccus hesperidum L. (Coccidae), Icerya purchasi Maskell (Monphlebidae) and Planococcus citri (Risso) (Pseudococcidae). A. melinus females accepted equally and spent the same time feeding on the five honeydews. The first intake of these honeydews prolonged A. melinus longevity but only between 1 and 2 days, independently of the honeydew source. However, when they had continuous access to honeydew, A. melinus fitness entirely depended on the honeydew source. The longevity and realized fecundity of females with access to honeydew excreted by A. spiraecola was similar to unfed females. Contrarily, C. hesperidum and I. purchasi excreted the honeydew with highest nutritional value. In addition, A. melinus discriminated between honeydews with high and poor nutritional quality in a choice-test. Our results demonstrate that honeydew excreted by hemipterans in citrus show a distinct hierarchy of quality and A. melinus females are able to recognize it. These results indicate that the presence of different types of honeydews in agroecosystems should be taken into account separately in this and future biological control programs to design proper measures. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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spelling ReDivia45682025-04-25T14:43:52Z Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality Tena, Alejandro Llácer, Elena Urbaneja, Alberto Parasitoids feed commonly on honeydew. However, a high content of energy reserves in honeydew-fed parasitoids does not imply an increase of their fitness because honeydew may be relatively unsuitable. Herein, we studied the feeding behavior and fitness (longevity and fecundity) of a parasitoid, Aphytis melinus DeBach (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae), which host does not produce honeydew, when it had access to honeydew excreted by five common hemipterans in citrus: Aleurothrixus floccosus (Maskell) (Aleyrodidae), Aphis spiraecola Patch (Aphididae), Coccus hesperidum L. (Coccidae), Icerya purchasi Maskell (Monphlebidae) and Planococcus citri (Risso) (Pseudococcidae). A. melinus females accepted equally and spent the same time feeding on the five honeydews. The first intake of these honeydews prolonged A. melinus longevity but only between 1 and 2 days, independently of the honeydew source. However, when they had continuous access to honeydew, A. melinus fitness entirely depended on the honeydew source. The longevity and realized fecundity of females with access to honeydew excreted by A. spiraecola was similar to unfed females. Contrarily, C. hesperidum and I. purchasi excreted the honeydew with highest nutritional value. In addition, A. melinus discriminated between honeydews with high and poor nutritional quality in a choice-test. Our results demonstrate that honeydew excreted by hemipterans in citrus show a distinct hierarchy of quality and A. melinus females are able to recognize it. These results indicate that the presence of different types of honeydews in agroecosystems should be taken into account separately in this and future biological control programs to design proper measures. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. 2017-06-01T10:10:26Z 2017-06-01T10:10:26Z 2013 NOV 2013 article Tena, A., Llacer, E., Urbaneja, A. (2013). Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality. Biological Control, 67(2), 117-122. 1049-9644; 1090-2112 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4568 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.07.018 en openAccess Impreso
spellingShingle Tena, Alejandro
Llácer, Elena
Urbaneja, Alberto
Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
title Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
title_full Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
title_fullStr Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
title_full_unstemmed Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
title_short Biological control of a non-honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
title_sort biological control of a non honeydew producer mediated by a distinct hierarchy of honeydew quality
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4568
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