Measuring Natural Enemy Dispersal from Cover Crops in a California Vineyard

Publication date: Available online 18 July 2018Source: Biological ControlAuthor(s): N.A. Irvin, J.R. Hagler, M.S. HoddleAbstractDispersal of natural enemies from buckwheat cover crop plots embedded within a southern California vineyard during spring and summer was investigated by using an arthropod mark-capture technique. Specifically, arthropods were marked in flowering buckwheat plots by spraying plants with a “triple mark” solution containing yellow dye, casein protein, and albumin protein. In turn, we recorded the abundance of marked and unmarked natural enemies at a gradient of distances from the treated buckwheat plots into the vineyard. Natural enemies marked with yellow dye were identified visually, while the presence of casein and albumin protein marks were detected using anti-casein and anti-albumin enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). The percentage of natural enemies marked with yellow dye indicated that spiders, predatory thrips (Aeolothripidae), and minute pirate bugs (Anthocoridae) dispersed 9 m (i.e., 3 rows) from marked buckwheat refuges over a six day period. The percentage of leafhopper parasitoids (Anagrus erythroueurae S. Trjapitzin and Chiappini) marked with yellow dye indicated that 22% of marked parasitoids were captured up to 18 m (i.e., six rows) to 30 m (i.e., 10 rows) from buckwheat plots up to six days after marks were applied to cover crops. Up to 17% of natural enemies marked with yellow dye, albumin, or casein were captured in non-tr...
Source: Biological Control - Category: Biology Source Type: research
More News: Biology | Parasitology