Response of the predatory mite, Amblyseius womersleyi (Acari : Phytoseiidae), toward herbivore-induced plant volatiles: Variation in response betweentwo local populations
T. Maeda et al., Response of the predatory mite, Amblyseius womersleyi (Acari : Phytoseiidae), toward herbivore-induced plant volatiles: Variation in response betweentwo local populations, APPL ENT ZO, 34(4), 1999, pp. 449-454
We studied the response of two populations of the predatory mite, Amblyseiu
s womersleyi, toward volatiles of kidney bean leaf infested by Tetranychus
urticae in a Y-tube olfactometer. The predators collected in Kyoto (A. wome
rsleyi-Kyoto) showed a significant preference for infested leaf volatiles t
o uninfested leaf volatiles, whereas the predators collected in Shizuoka (A
. womersleyi-Shizuoka) did not. This difference was not due to a difference
in their feeding experiences but to a genetic difference, since both popul
ations were tested after being reared under the same laboratory conditions
for more than three months (more than 10 generations). We then compared the
performance and behavior of the two populations. The fecundity and oviposi
tion periods of A. womersleyi-Kyoto were not significantly different from t
hose of A. womersleyi-Shizuoka However, the dispersal of A. womersleyi-Kyot
o from a T. urticae-infested bean leaf culture occurred earlier than that o
f A. womersleyi-Shizuoka. The lower dispersal ability in A. womersleyi-Shiz
uoka compared that of A. womersleyi-Kyoto is attributed to a difference in
ability to distinguish infested plant volatiles from uninfested ones.