A. Tonhasca et al., AGGREGATION PATTERNS OF BEMISIA-TABACI IN RESPONSE TO INSECTICIDE APPLICATIONS, Entomologia experimentalis et applicata, 72(3), 1994, pp. 265-272
We measured the effect of insecticide applications on the distribution
patterns of the sweet potato whitefly, Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius), in
fields of cantaloupe, Cucumis melo L., in Yuma, Arizona. Whitefly inf
estations were measured by counts of adults, eggs, first to mid/fourth
instars, and late-fourth instars ('red-eyed') nymphs. Adults were sam
pled from the entire leaf, and immature stages were counted in a 1-cm(
2) area of a leaf. The indices b (Power Law), beta (Patchiness regress
ion) and I-d (Morisita) indicated that all life stages were aggregated
, but results for the three indices were not similar for determining t
he relative aggregation levels between treatments. In general, indices
beta and I-d indicated higher aggregation in insecticide-treated fiel
ds, whereas b had mixed results. The Morisita index was sensitive to a
few unusually high means among a series of low densities in the treat
ment plots, what could be attributed to refuges due to failure in the
insecticide applications. Despite the usefulness of the Power Law and
the Patchiness regression for describing the relationship between spat
ial or temporal variability and mean densities, we suggest that I-d is
more appropriate for expression of spatial distribution because it is
based on a precise definition of aggregation.