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Dicyphus predatory bugs pre-established on tomato plants reduce Nesidiocoris tenuis population growth
Generalist predators are increasingly used in biological pest control for greenhouse crops, as they control multiple pests and persist in crops even when prey is scarce. However, some of these predators may cause plant damage due to their omnivorous feeding behaviour. In many European regions, the o...
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Published in: | Journal of pest science 2022-09, Vol.95 (4), p.1659-1670 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Generalist predators are increasingly used in biological pest control for greenhouse crops, as they control multiple pests and persist in crops even when prey is scarce. However, some of these predators may cause plant damage due to their omnivorous feeding behaviour. In many European regions, the omnivorous predator
Nesidiocoris tenuis
(Reuter) (Hemiptera: Miridae) is considered to be a serious tomato pest, regardless of the biological control services it offers, and integrated pest management (IPM) strategies are based instead on
Macrolophus pygmaeus
(Rambur). However, as
N. tenuis
may competitively displace
M. pygmaeus
and cause severe damage, growers often resort to pesticide use, disrupting their biological control practice. In this study, we evaluated the competitive interactions of three mirid predators,
Dicyphus errans
Wolff
, Dicyphus bolivari
Lindberg, and
Dicyphus cerastii
Wagner, with
N. tenuis.
The results showed that pre-establishment of heterospecific mirid species can successfully suppress
N. tenuis
in the greenhouse; population growth was reduced by more than 90% compared to plants without competing predators. Further laboratory trials revealed reciprocal intraguild predation between these species in the absence of extraguild prey.
Dicyphus
adults predated on
N. tenuis
nymphs, while this was not found for
M. pygmaeus
. In olfactometer bioassays,
N. tenuis
females preferred plants previously exposed to heterospecifics but not conspecifics, suggesting that this mirid does not avoid competition. These results suggest that the three
Dicyphus
species could be interesting candidates for preventive releases in tomato crops due to their ability to effectively suppress
N. tenuis
population growth. |
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ISSN: | 1612-4758 1612-4766 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10340-022-01482-8 |