1979
DOI: 10.1111/j.1570-7458.1979.tb02877.x
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BIOLOGY AND TEMPERATURE RELATIONSHIPS OF CHRYSOPA SP., MICROMUS TASMANIAE AND NABIS CAPSIFORMIS

Abstract: Immature Chrysopa sp. and Nabis capsiformis required 335 and 325 d°, respectively, for development from egg to adult, while larvae of Micromus tasmaniae were able to complete development at 5°. Mean adult female longevity and oviposition rate at 23° were 52 d (max. 83 d) and 18.1 eggs/d, and 30 d (max. 43 d) and 10.4 eggs/d for C. sp. and N. capsiformis respectively, and oviposition rate of M. tasmaniae averaged 19.1 eggs/d during 5 weeks. Reduced longevity and increased oviposition rate at higher temperatures… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…La localización de sus presas a través de sus secreciones, kairomonas, alomonas y/o feromonas ha sido frecuentemente registrada, y sobre ellas pueden llegar a ser extremadamente voraces (Withycombe, 1925;Principi, 1954bPrincipi, , 1984Tjeder, 1966;Canard, 1973aCanard, , 1973bWattebled et al, 1978;Samson & Blood, 1979Canard & Duelli, 1984;New, 1986aNew, , 1988aNew, , 1989New, , 2001Duelli, 1987b;Frazer, 1988;Szentkirályi, 1989Szentkirályi, , 2001aMcEwen et al, 1993aMcEwen et al, , 2001Růžička, 1994Růžička, , 1997aRůžička, , 1997bRůžička, , 1998Růžička, , 2010Mendel et al, 1997Mendel et al, , 2004Boo et al, 1998Boo et al, , 1999Boo et al, , 2003Bakthavatsalam & Singh, 1999;Nelson et al, 2001;Canard & Volkovich, 2001;Penny, 2002;Branco et al, 2006aBranco et al, , 2006bSchwartzberg et al, 2008;Koczor et al, 2010Koczor et al, , 2015.…”
Section: Datos Generales Sobre Su Biología Comportamiento Estadios unclassified
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…La localización de sus presas a través de sus secreciones, kairomonas, alomonas y/o feromonas ha sido frecuentemente registrada, y sobre ellas pueden llegar a ser extremadamente voraces (Withycombe, 1925;Principi, 1954bPrincipi, , 1984Tjeder, 1966;Canard, 1973aCanard, , 1973bWattebled et al, 1978;Samson & Blood, 1979Canard & Duelli, 1984;New, 1986aNew, , 1988aNew, , 1989New, , 2001Duelli, 1987b;Frazer, 1988;Szentkirályi, 1989Szentkirályi, , 2001aMcEwen et al, 1993aMcEwen et al, , 2001Růžička, 1994Růžička, , 1997aRůžička, , 1997bRůžička, , 1998Růžička, , 2010Mendel et al, 1997Mendel et al, , 2004Boo et al, 1998Boo et al, , 1999Boo et al, , 2003Bakthavatsalam & Singh, 1999;Nelson et al, 2001;Canard & Volkovich, 2001;Penny, 2002;Branco et al, 2006aBranco et al, , 2006bSchwartzberg et al, 2008;Koczor et al, 2010Koczor et al, , 2015.…”
Section: Datos Generales Sobre Su Biología Comportamiento Estadios unclassified
“…), bien con aparición de imagos más primaverales o más estivales, y otras especies polivoltinas pueden adaptarse a ciclos monovoltinos en determinados medios montanos (ej. : algunas especies de Chrysopa o Chrysoperla), y lógicamente las elevadas altitudes y latitudes limitan sus poblaciones (Killington, 1929(Killington, , 1936(Killington, , 1937Zelený, 1971aZelený, , 1984aZelený, , 1984bNeuenschwander et al, 1975;Samson & Blood, 1979;Greve, 1984;Sagné & Canard, 1984;Canard, 1985Canard, , 1986aCanard, , 1997Duelli, 1986b;New, 1986aNew, , 1989Vannier, 1986Vannier, , 1987Vannier & Canard, 1989;Pantaleoni, 1990;Canard et al, 1992aCanard et al, , 1996Canard & Vannier, 1992;Duelli, 1992;Volkovich, 1998;Szentkirályi, 2001a;Horton et al, 2002;Penny et al, 2007, etc. ).…”
Section: (Ver Suarius Walsinghami)unclassified
“…The predatory damsel bug, Nabis kinbergii (Hem., Nabidae), is one of the most common and widespread species in Australia, New Zealand and some islands in the Western Pacific ( Strommer , 1988). This predator commonly occurs in cotton and lucerne fields ( Samson and Blood , 1979; Siddique and Chapman , 1987a). Although aphids are the main prey of N. kinbergii in lucerne fields, DBM was found to be more suitable as a prey for laboratory feeding studies ( Siddique and Chapman , 1987a,b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pacific damsel bug, Nabis kinbergii Reuter (Hemiptera: Nabidae) is a common species distributed in all states of Australia and many other parts of the Pacific Islands, where it has often been misidentified as N. capsiformis (Woodward, 1982;Woodward & Strommer, 1982;Siddique & Chapman, 1987a;Samson & Blood, 1979). In lucerne and cotton crops N. kinbergii has been found to be one of the most abundant generalist predators feeding on aphids (bluegreen lucerne aphids, Acyrthosiphon kondoii and pea aphids, A. pisum), mirids (Australian crop mirid, Sidnia kinbergi, potato mired, Calocoris norvegicus) and other insects (Leathwick & Winterbourn, 1984).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%