同种存在对捕食螨饮食诱导发育反应的影响

IF 1.3 3区 农林科学 Q2 ENTOMOLOGY
Yun Xu, Keshi Zhang, Zhi-Qiang Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要 发育过程中的饮食和社会经验会对个体的适应性产生深远影响,进而影响种群动态。了解种群数量的驱动因素对于生态研究和害虫管理至关重要。在这项研究中,我们调查了Phytoseiulus persimilis Athias-Henriot(一种二斑蜘蛛螨Tetranychus urticae Koch的天敌)的饮食诱导可塑性、食人、社会互动和生活史特征之间的相互作用。这项研究探讨了在Phytoseiulus persimilis的未成熟发育过程中,不同的猎物密度和非进食同种动物的存在如何影响其生存、食人、猎物消耗、发育时间和成熟时的体型。结果表明,存活率受猎物可获得性的影响,在低猎物密度条件下,食人现象会增加。非进食同类的存在对长尾雉有显著影响,导致猎物消耗量增加、未成熟发育加速和成熟时体型缩小。这些发现为捕食者与被捕食者之间复杂的动态相互作用提供了见解,并为涉及长尾雉的害虫管理策略提供了有价值的启示。饮食和社会互动对寿命和繁殖力等其他生活史特征的影响应在今后的研究中加以探讨。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of conspecific presence on diet-induced developmental responses in a predatory mite
Abstract Diet and social experience during development can have profound influences on the fitness of individuals and subsequently affect population dynamics. Understanding the factors driving population size is fundamental to ecological studies and pest management. In this study, we investigated the interplay between diet-induced plasticity, cannibalism, social interactions, and life history traits in Phytoseiulus persimilis Athias-Henriot, a natural predator of the two-spotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae Koch. This research explored how varying prey densities and the presence of a non-feeding conspecific during P. persimilis' immature development impacts survival, cannibalism, prey consumption, developmental time, and size at maturity. Results show that survival rates are influenced by prey availability, with an increase in cannibalism observed under low prey density conditions. The presence of non-feeding conspecifics had a significant impact on P. persimilis, leading to increased prey consumption, accelerated immature development, and reduced size at maturity. These findings provide insights into the complex dynamics of predator-prey interactions and offer valuable implications for pest management strategies involving P. persimilis. The influence of diet and social interaction on additional life history traits, such as lifespan and fecundity, should be examined in future studies.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
33.30%
发文量
152
期刊介绍: Systematic and Applied Acarology (SAA) is an international journal of the Systematic and Applied Acarology Society (SAAS). The journal is intended as a publication outlet for all acarologists in the world. There is no page charge for publishing in SAA. If the authors have funds to publish, they can pay US$20 per page to enable their papers published for open access. SAA publishes papers reporting results of original research on any aspects of mites and ticks. Due to the recent increase in submissions, SAA editors will be more selective in manuscript evaluation: (1) encouraging more high quality non-taxonomic papers to address the balance between taxonomic and non-taxonomic papers, and (2) discouraging single species description (see new special issues for single new species description) while giving priority to high quality systematic papers on comparative treatments and revisions of multiple taxa. In addition to review papers and research articles (over 4 printed pages), we welcome short correspondence (up to 4 printed pages) for condensed version of short papers, comments on other papers, data papers (with one table or figure) and short reviews or opinion pieces. The correspondence format will save space by omitting the abstract, key words, and major headings such as Introduction.
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