| Literature DB >> 28211500 |
Yi Zou1, Joop de Kraker2, Felix J J A Bianchi3, Mario D van Telgen1, Haijun Xiao4, Wopke van der Werf1.
Abstract
Immobilized preys are routinely used in agro-ecological exposure studies to quantify predation of pests under field conditions, but this method has not been validated. Our purpose was to determine the validity of using immobilized adults of the major rice pest Nilaparvata lugens, brown plant hopper (BPH), as sentinels. We used direct observation by video recording to determine the causal agents of removal of field exposed BPH sentinels with two experiments: 1) we recorded removal events of dead, immobilized BPH; and 2) we compared removal of (i) dead, immobilized BPH, (ii) live, immobilized BPH, and (iii) live, mobile BPH. Long-horned grasshoppers were responsible for most removals of dead, immobilized BPH, in both experiments. Predatory ground beetles removed most of the live, immobilized BPH, whereas frogs were the major predators of live, mobile BPH. Overall, we showed that removal of immobilized sentinel prey is not representative for predation of live, mobile prey, stressing the need for a critical assessment of commonly used sentinel methods. In addition, we found that frogs played the major role in predation of BPH in rice. As current strategies to enhance biocontrol of planthoppers in rice focus on arthropod natural enemies, this finding could have major implications.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28211500 PMCID: PMC5314450 DOI: 10.1038/srep42210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Overview of a selection of studies using immobilized prey as sentinels.
| Prey species | Common name | Prey type | Immobilize method | Study system | Study region | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pea aphid | Adults | Glued | Barley fields | Sweden | ||
| Pea aphid | Adults | Glued | Wheat | Eight European countries | ||
| Pea aphid | Adults | Glued | Several cereal fields | Five European regions | ||
| Black cutworm | Larvae | Pinned | Golf courses | Maryland, USA | ||
| Black cutworm | Larvae | Pinned | Grassland | Lexington, USA | ||
| Codling moth | Larvae | Tethered | Apple orchard | West Virginia, USA | ||
| Corn rootworm | Larvae | Pinned | Maize | South Dakota, USA | ||
| Light brown apple moth | Larvae | Pinned | Vineyard | New Zealand | ||
| Wax moth | Larvae | Caged | Garden or fallow fields | Ohio, USA | ||
| Tobacco budworm | Larvae | Pinned | Forest | Arkansas, USA | ||
| Diamondback moth | Larvae | Pinned | Brussels sprout | Netherlands | ||
| Fall armyworm and wax moth | Larvae | Pinned or glued | Corn | Michigan, USA | ||
| Mealworm | Larvae | Glued | Agroforestry system | Indonesia | ||
| Cabbage looper | Larvae | Glued | Kale | California, USA |
Figure 1Number of full removals and partial removals of brown plant hopper by different consumer taxa and rain in Experiment 1.
Figure 2Experiment 2: number of full removals and number of partial removals of brown plant hopper by different causes in three treatments (DI: dead immobilized; LI: live immobilized; LM: live mobile).
Figure 3Taxa responsible for removal of brown plant hopper in three treatments (DI: dead immobilized; LI: live immobilized; LM: live mobile) in Experiment 2.
Figure 4Setup of video monitoring of removal of dead, immobilized brown plant hopper in Experiment 1.
Figure 5Setup of experiment 2, with camera in the field (a); monitoring screen (b); transfer tubes with live, mobile brown plant hoppers (BPH) (c); long-horned grasshopper feeding on dead, immobilized BPH (d); ground beetle feeding on live, immobilized BPH (e); and frog catching live, mobile BPH (f).