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Manipulation of Tritrophic Interactions for IPM

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The Slow Growth High Mortality Hypothesis. Feeding on sub-optimal food produces an increase in insect herbivore developmental time. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Manipulation of Tritrophic Interactions for IPM


1
Manipulation of Tritrophic Interactions for IPM
2
Tri-trophic Interaction
Predator/parasitoids
Herbivores
Plants
3
Plants Interact With the Third Trophic Level
Chemically Morphologically
4
Multi-trophic interactions
Hyperparasitoid
Predator/parasitoids
Herbivores
Plants
5
The Slow Growth High Mortality Hypothesis
6
  • Feeding on sub-optimal food produces an increase
    in insect herbivore developmental time.

7
  • Increased developmental time in herbivores may
    increase vulnerability to natural enemies

8
The Slow-Growth-High-Mortality Hypothesis
  • Prolonged larval development of herbivores
    results in greater vulnerability and thus greater
    mortality due to natural enemies.
  • (Clancy and Price 1987).

9
Tests Have Produced Mixed Results
  • Support
  • - Free feeding herbivores.
  • - Feeding on same or related plant species.
  • Fail
  • - Concealed feeding herbivores.
  • - Feeding on unrelated plant species.

10
Studies Supporting the Hypothesis

G.lineola
- Develop longer on S.sasyclados
- Predators attack more on S.dasyclados
P.rapae
- Develop longer on low N collards
- Predators attack more on low N collards
M.disstria
- Develop longer on late budbreaks
- Predators attack more on late budtbreaks
11
Which Natural Enemies Have Been Considered to
Test the Hypothesis?
  • Suite of predators.
  • Single parasitoid species.
  • Parasitoid community.

12
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15
Orgyia leucostigma
Acer negundo
Salix nigra
16
Experimental Protocol
  • Rear O. leucostigma on willow and box elder.
  • Measure development time and adult mass on willow
    and box elder.
  • Use 7-year data base to determine percent
    parasitism of O.leucostigma on willow and box
    elder.

17
O. leucostigma developed faster on willow
Plt0.0001
18
Female O.leucostigma on willow were heavier than
on box elder.
b
c
F
F
a
a
M
M
19
Percent Parasitism of O.leucostigma on two tree
species
Overall percent parasitism on
Family
Parasitoid species
Box elder
Willow
1. X2 11.83 Plt0.001
20
In Summary
  • O. leucostigma developed faster in willow than in
    box elder.
  • Overall parasitism in O.leucostigma was greater
    in willow than in box elder.

21
Conclusion
  • The slow-growth-high-mortality hypothesis does
    not hold for O. leucostigma and its parasitoid
    community.

22
Conclusion
  • On a free feeding herbivore feeding on unrelated
    species.
  • Support
  • - One parasitoid species considered.
  • Fail
  • - A community of parasitoids considered.

23
Conclusion
  • The effect of host plant quality on individual
    species of natural enemies might differ
    significantly from the effect of host plant
    quality on the natural enemy community.

24
Differential susceptibility of herbivores to
natural enemies
25
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