• Castellano
  • English
  • Valenciá
Página de inicio de ReDivia
Página de la Generalitat ValenciáPágina de IVIA
View Item 
  •   ReDivia Home
  • 1.- Investigación
  • 1.1.- Artículos de revista académica
  • View Item
  •   ReDivia Home
  • 1.- Investigación
  • 1.1.- Artículos de revista académica
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

How a slow-ovipositing parasitoid can succeed as a biological control agent of the invasive mealybug Phenacoccus peruvianus: implications for future classical and conservation biological control programs

View/Open
Open 2015_Beltrà_How_Post-print.pdf (507.4Kb)
Export
untranslatedRefworks
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/4809
DOI
10.1007/s10526-015-9663-6
Derechos de acceso
openAccess
Metadata
Show full item record
Author
Beltra, A.; Soto, A.; Tena, Alejandro
Date
2015
Cita bibliográfica
Beltra, A., Soto, A., Tena, A. (2015). How a slow-ovipositing parasitoid can succeed as a biological control agent of the invasive mealybug Phenacoccus peruvianus: implications for future classical and conservation biological control programs. Biocontrol, 60(4), 473-484.
Abstract
Phenacoccus peruvianus Granara de Willink (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) is an invasive mealybug that has become a pest of ornamental plants in Europe and has recently been detected in California, USA. In this work, we studied the tritrophic interaction among this mealybug, its main parasitoid Acerophagus n. sp. near coccois (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae) and tending ants to disclose the success of this parasitoid controlling P. peruvianus. Acerophagus n. sp. near coccois accepted mealybugs for parasitism regardless of their size but did not host-feed. We recorded three active defenses of P. peruvianus. Host handling time was not influenced by these host defenses but was a time-consuming process that required more than 30 min. Tending ants, Lasius grandis (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae), reduced the time spent by parasitoids in a patch and disrupted oviposition attempts. The low numbers of ants tending mealybug colonies in Spain and France could explain why this parasitoid, with a long handling time, is an efficient biological control agent for P. peruvianus.
Collections
  • 1.1.- Artículos de revista académica

Browse

All of ReDiviaCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjetcsCategoriesIVIA CentersThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjetcsCategoriesIVIA Centers

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Of interest

IVIA Open Access PolicyIntellectual property and copyrightAutoarchiveFrequently Asked Questions

Indexers

Recolectauntranslated

El contenido de este sitio está bajo una licencia Creative Commons - No comercial - Sin Obra Derivada (by-nc-nd), salvo que se indique lo contrario.