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Life-cycle variation inPanonychus akitanus Ehara (Acarina:Tetranychidae)
Authors:Tetsuo Gotoh
Institution:(1) Institute of Applied Zoology, Faculty of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060, (Japan);(2) Present address: Laboratory of Applied Entomology, Faculty of Agriculture, Ibaraki University, Ami, 300-03 Ibaraki, Japan
Abstract:The life history ofPanonychus akitanus Ehara was studied in two Hokkaido populations on dwarf bamboos. The Sapporo population overwintered both as egg and female adult onSasa senanensis, and the Tomakomai population overwintered as egg onSasa apoiensis. Mites of the Sapporo population produced four or five generations from late April to late November or early December. The eggs that had overwintered began to hatch in mid-May, and this hatching period overlapped with that of eggs laid in late April by females that had overwintered. Therefore, mites with different overwintering stages would interbreed. Most eggs that had overwintered in the Tomakomai population hatched in mid-May, and about four generations were produced before early December, when only eggs were found. The density of mites per leaf of the Sapporo population reached a maximum in early May on old leaves and in late June on new leaves, and thereafter gradually decreased. The Tomakomai population initially decreased in density after hatching in the spring, but rapidly dispersed to new leaves, reached a peak in early September, and then gradually decreased. The maximal density was about 10 times higher and the distribution was less clumped (lower values of the aggregation index,m/m) than that of the Sapporo population. This was probably because the Sapporo mites could utilize only the underside of sporadically distributed leaves which were curled by spiders, whereas the Tomakomai mites inhabited any part of the leaf undersurface of the hairy host plant. Predators observed were phytoseiid mites and larvae of gall midges. The predatory effect on the Sapporo population was not clear. In the Tomakomai population, the number of gall midges correlated with the number of spider mites better than that of phytoseiid mites.
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