Js. Yang et Cs. Sadof, VARIEGATION IN COLEUS-BLUMEI AND THE LIFE-HISTORY OF CITRUS MEALYBUG (HOMOPTERA, PSEUDOCOCCIDAE), Environmental entomology, 24(6), 1995, pp. 1650-1655
Three leaf-color variants of Coleus bhumei 'Bellevue' (Bentham) were s
tudied to determine the effects of variegation-induced changes in host
-plant quality on life history and population growth of citrus mealybu
g, Planococcus citri (Risso). Compared with green counterparts, both r
ed- and yellow-variegated plants of C. blumei grew more slowly, had lo
wer rates of photosynthesis, and produced more leaf area per unit of b
iomass. All life history parameters of citrus mealybug were affected d
ifferentially by presence and type of variegation, with the exception
of egg hatch rate and female reproductive time. Nymphs developed most
rapidly and adult females produced the most eggs on red-variegated pla
nts. Mortality of nymphs was significantly higher on green plants than
on red- or yellow-variegated plants. Overall, the higher intrinsic ra
te of increase for citrus mealybug populations on red or yellow plants
indicated that variegated plants were more suitable hosts than green
plants. Increased population growth of citrus mealybug, in turn, kille
d red- and yellow-variegated plants sooner than green plants when they
were infested with a similar number of crawlers. This study suggested
that a horticulturally important feature, such as variegation, can in
crease the abundance of insect pests on host plants and make them more
vulnerable to pest injury.