Zq. Zhang et Jp. Sanderson, HUNGER AND AGE EFFECTS ON SEARCHING BEHAVIOR OF 3 SPECIES OF PREDATORY MITES (ACARI, PHYTOSEIIDAE), Canadian journal of zoology, 71(10), 1993, pp. 1997-2004
The effects of hunger level and adult age on searching behavior by the
predatory mites, Phytoseiulus persimilis Athias-Henriot, Typhlodromus
(= Metaseiulus) occidentalis Nesbitt, and Amblyseius andersoni (Chant
), in patches of the twospotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae Koch,
were studied in the laboratory by continuous observation. Foraging re
sponses such as patch giving-up time, patch time, and searching effici
ency by female predators were affected strongly by hunger level and we
akly by age; in some responses, the effects of hunger level changed wi
th age. Effects of hunger level and age on various responses differed
among predator species. In spite of the interspecific variation, starv
ation generally increased predator giving-up time and thus increased t
he duration of patch visits. Total patch time was correlated with the
duration of visits rather than the number of visits. Predators that sp
ent more time in prey patches also encountered and attacked more prey.
Prey encounters and attacks increased patch time by an increment in t
ime as a result of prey handling and by increasing the giving-up time.
With successive visits to the prey patch, the strength of predator re
sponses waned either because of habituation to patch cues or because o
f satiation after feeding. Host plant influence on predator behavior w
as stronger in the generalist A. andersoni than in the specialist P. p
ersimilis.