| Literature DB >> 27067101 |
Cleide Rosa Dias1,2, Ana Maria Guimarães Bernardo2, Jussara Mencalha2, Caelum Woods Carvalho Freitas2, Renato Almeida Sarmento3, Angelo Pallini2, Arne Janssen4,5.
Abstract
Prey are known to invest in costly antipredator behaviour when perceiving cues of dangerous, but not of relatively harmless predators. Whereas most studies investigate one type of antipredator behaviour, we studied several types (changes in oviposition, in escape and avoidance behaviour) in the spider mite Tetranychus evansi in response to cues from two predatory mites. The predator Phytoseiulus longipes is considered a dangerous predator for T. evansi, whereas Phytoseiulus macropilis has a low predation rate on this prey, thus is a much less dangerous predator. Spider mite females oviposited less on leaf disc halves with predator cues than on clean disc halves, independent of the predator species. On entire leaf discs, they laid fewer eggs in the presence of cues of the dangerous predator than on clean discs, but not in the presence of cues of the harmless predator. Furthermore, the spider mites escaped more often from discs with cues of the dangerous predator than from discs without predator cues, but they did not escape more from discs with cues of the harmless predator. The spider mites did not avoid plants with conspecifics and predators. We conclude that the spider mites displayed several different antipredator responses to the same predator species, and that some of these antipredator responses were stronger with cues of dangerous predators than with cues of harmless predators.Entities:
Keywords: Phytoseiulus longipes; Phytoseiulus macropilis; Predation risk; Predator–prey interaction; Tetranychus evansi; Trait-mediated interaction
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27067101 PMCID: PMC4891363 DOI: 10.1007/s10493-016-0042-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Appl Acarol ISSN: 0168-8162 Impact factor: 2.132
Fig. 1Mean (+SE, n = 20 females) oviposition of Tetranychus evansi after 24 h. a One half of each leaf disc had cues of predators whereas the other half did not. b Discs were either completely covered with cues of Phytoseiulus longipes or P. macropilis, or without such cues. Black bars indicate oviposition on discs (b) or disc halves (a) without predator cues, white bars that on discs (b) or disc halves (a) with predator cues. Asterisks indicate significant differences between treatment and control for each predator species separately; different letters indicate a significant difference between treatments with the different predator species, but for the same treatment, i.e. comparing the two white bars or the two black bars (GLM, p < 0.05)
Fig. 2Proportion (+SE, n = 20 females) of Tetranychus evansi that escaped from the arena where they were released. Black bars indicate the proportion of mites that escaped from discs without predator cues, white bars indicate that from discs with predator cues (Phytoseiulus longipes or P. macropilis). Asterisks indicate significant differences between treatment and control for each predator species separately; different letters indicate a significant difference between treatments with the different predator species, but for the same treatment, i.e. comparing the two white bars or the two black bars (GLM, p < 0.05)
Fig. 3Cumulative number (±SE) of Tetranychus evansi recaptured per plant through time on plants. a Plants either contained T. evansi (empty circles) or were clean (filled circles); b plants either contained T. evansi (empty circles) or T. evansi plus the predatory mite Phytoseiulus longipes (filled circles); c plants either contained T. evansi (empty circles) or T. evansi plus the predatory mite P. macropilis (filled circles)