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The Effect of Patch Size and Persistence of Host Plants on the Development of Acaricide Resistance in the Two-spotted Spider Mite Tetranychus Urticae (Acari: Tetranychidae)
Authors:Kouichi Goka
Institution:(1) Regional Environment Division, National Institute for Environmental Studies, 16–2 Onogawa, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305–0053, Japan. E-mail
Abstract:Spatial and temporal characteristics of host plants can influence the population biology of the herbivores feeding on them. In this study, I examined the effect of variation in host plant characteristics on the development of acaricide resistance in the two-spotted spider mite Tetranychus urticae, a widely distributed agricultural pest. This investigation examined the geographic variation in the degree of resistance to two new types of acaricide, pyridaben and fenpyroximate. From mortality tests at field-level concentrations of the acaricides, many populations collected from fruit trees and roses had a high frequency of resistant individuals for acaricides while almost all populations collected from herbaceous crops had low frequencies of resistant individuals. These results, combined with those from a previous allozyme study, indicate that patch size and persistence of host plants regulate the population structure of the mites including gene flow between populations and, by extension, the development of acaricide resistance.
Keywords:two-spotted spider mite  Tetranychus  acaricide resistance  host plant  pyridaben  fenpyroximate
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