Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice. / Sigsgaard, Lene; Toft, Søren; Villareal, Sylvia.

Agricultural and Forest Entomology. 2001. s. 285-295.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sigsgaard, L, Toft, S & Villareal, S 2001, Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice. i Agricultural and Forest Entomology. s. 285-295. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1461-9555.2001.00115.x

APA

Sigsgaard, L., Toft, S., & Villareal, S. (2001). Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice. I Agricultural and Forest Entomology (s. 285-295) https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1461-9555.2001.00115.x

Vancouver

Sigsgaard L, Toft S, Villareal S. Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice. I Agricultural and Forest Entomology. 2001. s. 285-295 https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1461-9555.2001.00115.x

Author

Sigsgaard, Lene ; Toft, Søren ; Villareal, Sylvia. / Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice. Agricultural and Forest Entomology. 2001. s. 285-295

Bibtex

@inbook{f35cfc0a5f41400ead277806516dbe73,
title = "Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice",
abstract = "The fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata was assessed on diets of brown planthopper Nilaparvata lugens (BPH), green leafhopper Nephotettix virescens (GLH), Collembola (Entomobryidae), Drosophila melanogaster and three prey mixtures; BPH-GLH, BPH-GLH-Collembola and a full mixed diet of BPH-GLH-Collembola-D. melanogaster. Egg production and hatching success was high in A. formosana except on the BPH, the GLH and the BPH-GLH diets. In P. pseudoannulata egg production and hatching success was lowest on diets of GLH and BPH-GLH, whereas this spider used BPH better. Differences between offspring sizes were small. Survival of A. formosana females was lowest on the GLH and BPH-GLH diets. In P. pseudoannulata survival did not differ significantly. Food conversion efficiency was highest on the Collembola and the D. melanogaster diets for both spiders. Overall, diets of Collembola and D. melanogaster had the highest quality for both spiders, the BPH-GLH-Collembola and the full mixed diets were intermediate in quality, the quality of the BPH diet was intermediate to low and quality of the GLH and BPH-GLH diets was low. There need not be a contradiction between low dietary value of hoppers and successful natural biological control provided that the nutritional needs of the spiders are met by sufficient alternative prey. The hopper-spider relationship is comparable to that of aphids and spiders in temperate cereals, suggesting that low dietary quality of Homopterans to spiders may be widespread.",
keywords = "Atypena formosana, Biological control, Collembola, Drosophila melanogaster, Fecundity, Nephotettix virescens, Nilaparvata lugens, Pardosa pseudoannulata, Prey, Spider",
author = "Lene Sigsgaard and S{\o}ren Toft and Sylvia Villareal",
year = "2001",
doi = "10.1046/j.1461-9555.2001.00115.x",
language = "English",
isbn = "ISSN 1461-9555",
pages = "285--295",
booktitle = "Agricultural and Forest Entomology",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Diet-dependent fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata, predators in irrigated rice

AU - Sigsgaard, Lene

AU - Toft, Søren

AU - Villareal, Sylvia

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - The fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata was assessed on diets of brown planthopper Nilaparvata lugens (BPH), green leafhopper Nephotettix virescens (GLH), Collembola (Entomobryidae), Drosophila melanogaster and three prey mixtures; BPH-GLH, BPH-GLH-Collembola and a full mixed diet of BPH-GLH-Collembola-D. melanogaster. Egg production and hatching success was high in A. formosana except on the BPH, the GLH and the BPH-GLH diets. In P. pseudoannulata egg production and hatching success was lowest on diets of GLH and BPH-GLH, whereas this spider used BPH better. Differences between offspring sizes were small. Survival of A. formosana females was lowest on the GLH and BPH-GLH diets. In P. pseudoannulata survival did not differ significantly. Food conversion efficiency was highest on the Collembola and the D. melanogaster diets for both spiders. Overall, diets of Collembola and D. melanogaster had the highest quality for both spiders, the BPH-GLH-Collembola and the full mixed diets were intermediate in quality, the quality of the BPH diet was intermediate to low and quality of the GLH and BPH-GLH diets was low. There need not be a contradiction between low dietary value of hoppers and successful natural biological control provided that the nutritional needs of the spiders are met by sufficient alternative prey. The hopper-spider relationship is comparable to that of aphids and spiders in temperate cereals, suggesting that low dietary quality of Homopterans to spiders may be widespread.

AB - The fecundity of the spiders Atypena formosana and Pardosa pseudoannulata was assessed on diets of brown planthopper Nilaparvata lugens (BPH), green leafhopper Nephotettix virescens (GLH), Collembola (Entomobryidae), Drosophila melanogaster and three prey mixtures; BPH-GLH, BPH-GLH-Collembola and a full mixed diet of BPH-GLH-Collembola-D. melanogaster. Egg production and hatching success was high in A. formosana except on the BPH, the GLH and the BPH-GLH diets. In P. pseudoannulata egg production and hatching success was lowest on diets of GLH and BPH-GLH, whereas this spider used BPH better. Differences between offspring sizes were small. Survival of A. formosana females was lowest on the GLH and BPH-GLH diets. In P. pseudoannulata survival did not differ significantly. Food conversion efficiency was highest on the Collembola and the D. melanogaster diets for both spiders. Overall, diets of Collembola and D. melanogaster had the highest quality for both spiders, the BPH-GLH-Collembola and the full mixed diets were intermediate in quality, the quality of the BPH diet was intermediate to low and quality of the GLH and BPH-GLH diets was low. There need not be a contradiction between low dietary value of hoppers and successful natural biological control provided that the nutritional needs of the spiders are met by sufficient alternative prey. The hopper-spider relationship is comparable to that of aphids and spiders in temperate cereals, suggesting that low dietary quality of Homopterans to spiders may be widespread.

KW - Atypena formosana

KW - Biological control

KW - Collembola

KW - Drosophila melanogaster

KW - Fecundity

KW - Nephotettix virescens

KW - Nilaparvata lugens

KW - Pardosa pseudoannulata

KW - Prey

KW - Spider

U2 - 10.1046/j.1461-9555.2001.00115.x

DO - 10.1046/j.1461-9555.2001.00115.x

M3 - Book chapter

C2 - 5416924

SN - ISSN 1461-9555

SP - 285

EP - 295

BT - Agricultural and Forest Entomology

ER -

ID: 169734728