Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus

Background: Delottococcus aberiae is an invasive mealybug that produces severe damage in Spanish citrus. This mealybug has established a mutualistic relationship with native Mediterranean ant species that may limit biological control of this pest. Herein, we evaluated the effect of tending ants on t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Plata, Ángel, Gómez-Martínez, María A., Beitia, Francisco J., Tena, Alejandro
Formato: Artículo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley Online Library 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8601
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ps.7380
_version_ 1855492521957785600
author Plata, Ángel
Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Beitia, Francisco J.
Tena, Alejandro
author_browse Beitia, Francisco J.
Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Plata, Ángel
Tena, Alejandro
author_facet Plata, Ángel
Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Beitia, Francisco J.
Tena, Alejandro
author_sort Plata, Ángel
collection ReDivia
description Background: Delottococcus aberiae is an invasive mealybug that produces severe damage in Spanish citrus. This mealybug has established a mutualistic relationship with native Mediterranean ant species that may limit biological control of this pest. Herein, we evaluated the effect of tending ants on the biological control of D. aberiae. To do this, we compared: (I) the density of D. aberiae, (II) the density of its natural enemies, and (III) the damage produced by the mealybug in trees with (control) and without ants (ants excluded with sticky barriers) in two citrus orchards across two consecutive years. Results: Lasius grandis was the most abundant ant species in both orchards and represented more than 95% of the ants tending D. aberiae in control trees. Spiders and lacewings were the most abundant predators observed in mealybug colonies, and the exclusion of mutualistic ants increased their abundance. Moreover, in control trees, ant activity throughout the year was negatively correlated with the relative abundance of predators (number of predators per mealybug). No parasitoids were recovered during field experiments. Ant exclusion reduced the density of D. aberiae and the ratio of damaged fruit at harvest across years and orchards. Conclusions: This work corroborates the previous finding that D. aberiae benefits from its mutualistic relationship with L. grandis, probably because the presence of ants reduced the abundance of generalist predators. This mutualism can be disrupted using physical barriers on the trunk. Further research should assess other methods of ant control that are more economic and feasible for citrus producers.
format Artículo
id ReDivia8601
institution Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Wiley Online Library
publisherStr Wiley Online Library
record_format dspace
spelling ReDivia86012025-04-25T14:49:08Z Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus Plata, Ángel Gómez-Martínez, María A. Beitia, Francisco J. Tena, Alejandro Ant-attendance Ant-exclusion Lasius grandis Delottococcus aberiae Mutualism Mediterranean ants Physical barriers H10 Pests of plants H01 Protection of plants - General aspects U10 Mathematical and statistical methods U40 Surveying methods Hemiptera Honeydew Biological control Citrus Background: Delottococcus aberiae is an invasive mealybug that produces severe damage in Spanish citrus. This mealybug has established a mutualistic relationship with native Mediterranean ant species that may limit biological control of this pest. Herein, we evaluated the effect of tending ants on the biological control of D. aberiae. To do this, we compared: (I) the density of D. aberiae, (II) the density of its natural enemies, and (III) the damage produced by the mealybug in trees with (control) and without ants (ants excluded with sticky barriers) in two citrus orchards across two consecutive years. Results: Lasius grandis was the most abundant ant species in both orchards and represented more than 95% of the ants tending D. aberiae in control trees. Spiders and lacewings were the most abundant predators observed in mealybug colonies, and the exclusion of mutualistic ants increased their abundance. Moreover, in control trees, ant activity throughout the year was negatively correlated with the relative abundance of predators (number of predators per mealybug). No parasitoids were recovered during field experiments. Ant exclusion reduced the density of D. aberiae and the ratio of damaged fruit at harvest across years and orchards. Conclusions: This work corroborates the previous finding that D. aberiae benefits from its mutualistic relationship with L. grandis, probably because the presence of ants reduced the abundance of generalist predators. This mutualism can be disrupted using physical barriers on the trunk. Further research should assess other methods of ant control that are more economic and feasible for citrus producers. 2023-04-05T11:11:28Z 2023-04-05T11:11:28Z 2023 article acceptedVersion Plata, Á., Gómez‐Martínez, M. A., Beitia, F. J. & Tena, A. (2023). Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus. Pest Management Science. Published on-line [24 January 2023], 1-10. 1526-498X (eISSN) 1526-4998 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8601 10.1002/ps.7380 10.58582/redivia.8477 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ps.7380 en This research was supported by the predoctoral grant PRE2018-083714 from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and the national project RTA2017-00095 provided by INIA. info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/Programa estatal de i+D+i Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad/RTA2017-00095-00-00/ES/Mejora de la gestión integrada de pseudocóccidos en cítricos y caqui Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ openAccess Wiley Online Library electronico
spellingShingle Ant-attendance
Ant-exclusion
Lasius grandis
Delottococcus aberiae
Mutualism
Mediterranean ants
Physical barriers
H10 Pests of plants
H01 Protection of plants - General aspects
U10 Mathematical and statistical methods
U40 Surveying methods
Hemiptera
Honeydew
Biological control
Citrus
Plata, Ángel
Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Beitia, Francisco J.
Tena, Alejandro
Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus
title Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus
title_full Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus
title_fullStr Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus
title_full_unstemmed Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus
title_short Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus
title_sort exclusion of mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug delottococcus aberiae in citrus
topic Ant-attendance
Ant-exclusion
Lasius grandis
Delottococcus aberiae
Mutualism
Mediterranean ants
Physical barriers
H10 Pests of plants
H01 Protection of plants - General aspects
U10 Mathematical and statistical methods
U40 Surveying methods
Hemiptera
Honeydew
Biological control
Citrus
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8601
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ps.7380
work_keys_str_mv AT plataangel exclusionofmediterraneanantspeciesenhancesbiologicalcontroloftheinvasivemealybugdelottococcusaberiaeincitrus
AT gomezmartinezmariaa exclusionofmediterraneanantspeciesenhancesbiologicalcontroloftheinvasivemealybugdelottococcusaberiaeincitrus
AT beitiafranciscoj exclusionofmediterraneanantspeciesenhancesbiologicalcontroloftheinvasivemealybugdelottococcusaberiaeincitrus
AT tenaalejandro exclusionofmediterraneanantspeciesenhancesbiologicalcontroloftheinvasivemealybugdelottococcusaberiaeincitrus