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Changes in intraspecific aggregation and the coexistence of predaceous apple mites
Authors:D H Slone  B A Croft
Abstract:The leaves of an apple tree are a patchy environment for leaf-inhabiting predaceous and phytophagous mites, consisting of discrete patches of leaf resources connected by relatively inhospitable petioles and branches. We investigated four species of predaceous mites ( Amblyseius andersoni , Galendromus occidentalis , Typhlodromus pyri (Acari: Phytoseiidae), and Zetzellia mali (Acari: Stigmaeidae)) inhabiting 'Red Delicious' apple trees ( Malus pumila ). These mites experience intra-guild predation (IGP), and we hypothesized that the vulnerable species would show increased aggregation when they are in plots with other predators. We also hypothesized that the increase in aggregation will be proportional to the vulnerability of the predator to IGP. We measured intraspecific aggregation with a binomial model that measures P(I), the amount of space a species occupies at a given average density, and compares this statistic among species at a common average density: samples that exhibit lower values of P(I) at a particular average density are considered to be more aggregated. We measured P(I) for the predaceous mites over four years, combining counts of all life stages. Data were segregated into groups with plots containing each predator alone, and each predator together with combinations of other predators. G. occidentalis and Z. mali showed significant increases in aggregation when other predators were present, with G. occidentalis showing the greatest change. T. pyri showed significant change only in the presence of Z. mali . A. andersoni , the largest mite studied here, showed no change in aggregation in the presence of other predators. We discuss possible causes of these changes in intraspecific aggregation and how they may promote long-term coexistence of predaceous mites.
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