2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10905-015-9527-z
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The Search Behavior of Omnivorous Thrips Larvae is Influenced by Spider Mite Cues

Abstract: The western flower thrips is an omnivorous insect that consumes both leaf tissue and spider mite eggs. For this reason, these thrips are often described as 'opportunistic predators' of spider mites. Several studies have shown that western flower thrips are often found in association with spider mites, and the development time of thrips decreases and their survivorship increases when they consume spider mite eggs. We tested the hypothesis that thrips larvae may respond to chemical cues from spider mites, and th… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(48 reference statements)
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“…Our results suggest that psyllid honeydew could serve as a prey‐location and oviposition cue for O. sauteri , but may reduce foraging by these predators. Predators were attracted to honeydew compared to no‐honeydew controls as demonstrated by orthokinesis (stopping and/or slowing down) and klinokinesis (increase of turning rates) . Similarly, O. sauteri bugs spent more time foraging in zones when psylla honeydew was present compared to a blank control without honeydew (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Our results suggest that psyllid honeydew could serve as a prey‐location and oviposition cue for O. sauteri , but may reduce foraging by these predators. Predators were attracted to honeydew compared to no‐honeydew controls as demonstrated by orthokinesis (stopping and/or slowing down) and klinokinesis (increase of turning rates) . Similarly, O. sauteri bugs spent more time foraging in zones when psylla honeydew was present compared to a blank control without honeydew (Fig.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Experimental arenas were divided into two equal‐sized zones to allow the simultaneous presentation of two stimuli (see Martini et al . 2015, for details). The four two‐choice comparisons that we included were (i) honeydew versus no stimulus (negative control), (ii) honeydew versus honey (positive control), (iii) honeydew versus pear psylla, and (iv) pear psylla + honeydew versus pear psylla alone.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition to consuming spider mite immatures [46,69], some research indicates that thrips are attracted to spider mite infested plants [70], engage in behavior associated with searching for prey when exposed to chemicals extracted from spider mite webbing [71], and play an important role in regulating spider mite populations [72]. However, the degree to which thrips consume spider mites appears to depend on the growth stage and condition of the host plant, with thrips less attracted to spider mites when plants are flowering [69,73], thrips eating more spider mite eggs as plant quality decreases [74], and thrips eating fewer eggs laid by mites feeding on plants where induced plant resistance was triggered [75].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%