| Literature DB >> 23238958 |
Y M van Houten1, J J Glas, H Hoogerbrugge, J Rothe, K J F Bolckmans, S Simoni, J van Arkel, J M Alba, M R Kant, M W Sabelis.
Abstract
Tomato plants have their leaves, petioles and stems covered with glandular trichomes that protect the plant against two-spotted spider mites and many other herbivorous arthropods, but also hinder searching by phytoseiid mites and other natural enemies of these herbivores. This trichome cover creates competitor-free and enemy-free space for the tomato russet mite (TRM) Aculops lycopersici (Acari: Eriophyidae), being so minute that it can seek refuge and feed inbetween the glandular trichomes on tomato cultivars currently used in practice. Indeed, several species of predatory mites tested for biological control of TRM have been reported to feed and reproduce when offered TRM as prey in laboratory experiments, yet in practice these predator species appeared to be unable to prevent TRM outbreaks. Using the phytoseiid mite, Amblydromalus limonicus, we found exactly the same, but also obtained evidence for successful establishment of a population of this predatory mite on whole plants that had been previously infested with TRM. This successful establishment may be explained by our observation that the defensive barrier of glandular plant trichomes is literally dropped some time after TRM infestation of the tomato plants: the glandular trichome heads first rapidly develop a brownish discoloration after which they dry out and fall over onto the plant surface. Wherever TRM triggered this response, predatory mites were able to successfully establish a population. Nevertheless, biological control was still unsuccessful because trichome deterioration in TRM-infested areas takes a couple of days to take effect and because it is not a systemic response in the plant, thereby enabling TRM to seek temporary refuge from predation in pest-free trichome-dense areas which continue to be formed while the plant grows. We formulate a hypothesis unifying these observations into one framework with an explicit set of assumptions and predictions to be tested in future experiments.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23238958 PMCID: PMC3641295 DOI: 10.1007/s10493-012-9638-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Appl Acarol ISSN: 0168-8162 Impact factor: 2.132
Percentage of total population of predatory mites (all stages of Amblydromalus limonicus) (mean ± SE) per tomato plant in one of three strata (bottom, middle, top), 3 and 4 weeks since 10 females were released on the leaves at the bottom of a tomato plant that received c. 2,500 tomato russet mites, 4 days before predator introduction
| Period | Stratum | Establishment success (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tomato russet mites | Predatory mites | ||
| 3 weeks | |||
| Top | 13.3 ± 2.5 | 0.0 ± 0.0 | |
| Middle | 53.8 ± 3.5 | 14.8 ± 9.1 | |
| Bottom | 32.9 ± 4.8 | 85.2 ± 9.1 | |
| 4 weeks | |||
| Top | 58.4 ± 5.1 | 11.5 ± 2.8 | |
| Middle | 35.3 ± 4.6 | 43.6 ± 7.3 | |
| Bottom | 6.2 ± 1.6 | 44.8 ± 8.2 | |
Number of plants is 10 (=replicates). Data are not statistically analyzed because the differences between mean % TRM and predators in the top stratum (after 3 and 4 weeks) are much larger than 3 times their SE
Fig. 1Population dynamics of tomato russet mites (grey diamonds) and predatory mites (Amblydromalus limonicus; black squares) and of tomato russet mites (Aculops lycopersici; open grey triangles) in absence of predators in three different strata (top, middle, bottom) of tomato plants over a period of 7 week. 5 leaf discs, each with 280 tomato russet mites, were placed on leaf 3–7 on day 0. Six days later, 140 predatory mites (all mobile stages) were randomly distributed over leaf 3–7. Means are shown as points (triangles, diamonds, squares) and associated vertical bars represent SE. Each of the two treatments was replicated three times. The vertical arrows indicate the approximate time period in which glandular hair fall-over takes place on the stems. Differences in TRM population at the last sampling date between plants with and without predators did not test significantly different using the two-sample-test (see “Results” section)
Fig. 2Changes in the number of intact Type VI trichomes (left panels) and amber-coloured Type VI trichomes (right panels) over a period of 18 days. Data represent means and standard errors of the number of trichomes per section (6 mm in length) per plant. Upper panels relate to main stem sections, middle panels to petiole 1 sections and lower panels to petiole 2 sections. For the number of intact type VI trichomes on stems the lines start to separate significantly on day 4; on petiole 1 on day 11 and on petiole 2 on day 11. Moreover, trichome ambering became apparent on the stems on day 7; on petiole 1 on day 7 and on petiole 2 on day 10 (t test, α = 0.05)