Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly

The parasitoid wasp Spalangia cameroni and the predatory beetle Pseudoophonus rufipes have long been studied for use as biological control agents against the Mediterranean fruit fly Ceratitis capitata, particularly in citrus fruit orchards. Nevertheless, these two species of natural enemies, when co...

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Autores principales: Tormos, José, Beitia, Francisco J., Asís, Josep D., De-Pedro, Luis
Formato: article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2019
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6245
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/aab.12422
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author Tormos, José
Beitia, Francisco J.
Asís, Josep D.
De-Pedro, Luis
author_browse Asís, Josep D.
Beitia, Francisco J.
De-Pedro, Luis
Tormos, José
author_facet Tormos, José
Beitia, Francisco J.
Asís, Josep D.
De-Pedro, Luis
author_sort Tormos, José
collection ReDivia
description The parasitoid wasp Spalangia cameroni and the predatory beetle Pseudoophonus rufipes have long been studied for use as biological control agents against the Mediterranean fruit fly Ceratitis capitata, particularly in citrus fruit orchards. Nevertheless, these two species of natural enemies, when competing for a common resource, may experience intraguild predation (IGP) interactions. These possible interactions, affecting parasitism and predation, have been evaluated in the present work, under laboratory conditions, through potential changes in functional response. Regarding host/prey density, both natural enemies, when acting alone, showed a type II functional response. Nevertheless, due to IGP, S. cameroni, in the presence of P. rufipes, showed a higher fertility rate and a type III functional response. The parasitism behaviour of S. cameroni was affected by the presence of the predator, reducing the host handling time. Conversely, the parasitism rate of S. cameroni did not vary in the presence of P. rufipes but the degree of superparasitism decreased and led to an increased fertility rate and an increasingly female-biased sex ratio. Meanwhile, the predatory efficiency of P. rufipes was not affected by the presence of S. cameroni but discrimination between parasitised and unparasitised pupae of C. capitata, with a preference for the latter, was reported for this predator species. Our results suggest that in biological control programmes, the use of only one of these species is recommended at low infestation levels, whilst at high densities of the pest, the combination of both natural enemies seems to be the most appropriate strategy.
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spelling ReDivia62452025-04-25T14:46:38Z Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly Tormos, José Beitia, Francisco J. Asís, Josep D. De-Pedro, Luis The parasitoid wasp Spalangia cameroni and the predatory beetle Pseudoophonus rufipes have long been studied for use as biological control agents against the Mediterranean fruit fly Ceratitis capitata, particularly in citrus fruit orchards. Nevertheless, these two species of natural enemies, when competing for a common resource, may experience intraguild predation (IGP) interactions. These possible interactions, affecting parasitism and predation, have been evaluated in the present work, under laboratory conditions, through potential changes in functional response. Regarding host/prey density, both natural enemies, when acting alone, showed a type II functional response. Nevertheless, due to IGP, S. cameroni, in the presence of P. rufipes, showed a higher fertility rate and a type III functional response. The parasitism behaviour of S. cameroni was affected by the presence of the predator, reducing the host handling time. Conversely, the parasitism rate of S. cameroni did not vary in the presence of P. rufipes but the degree of superparasitism decreased and led to an increased fertility rate and an increasingly female-biased sex ratio. Meanwhile, the predatory efficiency of P. rufipes was not affected by the presence of S. cameroni but discrimination between parasitised and unparasitised pupae of C. capitata, with a preference for the latter, was reported for this predator species. Our results suggest that in biological control programmes, the use of only one of these species is recommended at low infestation levels, whilst at high densities of the pest, the combination of both natural enemies seems to be the most appropriate strategy. 2019-05-15T10:37:43Z 2019-05-15T10:37:43Z 2018 article Tormos, J.; Beitia, F.; Asis, J. D.; de Pedro, L. (2018). Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: Implications for biological control of medfly. Annals of Applied Biology, 172(3), 321-331. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6245 10.1111/aab.12422 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/aab.12422 en closedAccess electronico
spellingShingle Tormos, José
Beitia, Francisco J.
Asís, Josep D.
De-Pedro, Luis
Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly
title Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly
title_full Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly
title_fullStr Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly
title_full_unstemmed Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly
title_short Intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit: implications for biological control of medfly
title_sort intraguild interactions between two biological control agents in citrus fruit implications for biological control of medfly
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6245
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/aab.12422
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