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Laboratory and field studies supporting the development of Heringia calcarata as a candidate biological control agent for Eriosoma lanigerum in New Zealand
Authors:S D M Gresham  J G Charles  M W R Sandanayaka  J C Bergh
Institution:1. Alson H. Smith, Jr. Agricultural Research and Extension Center, Virginia Tech, Winchester, VA, 22602, USA
2. The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited, Mt Albert, Private Bag 92169, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand
Abstract:Studies supporting a project seeking to introduce Heringia calcarata (Loew) (Diptera: Syrphidae) to New Zealand (NZ) to supplement biological control of woolly apple aphid (WAA), Eriosoma lanigerum (Hausmann) (Hemiptera: Aphididae) are reported. Annual surveys of H. calcarata presence and abundance in a Virginia, USA apple orchard revealed a bimodal distribution, with peaks in mid-June and mid-September. In the field, female H. calcarata oviposited on sentinel apple shoots infested with WAA, providing an efficient method for egg collection and larval production. Similarly, most field-collected females readily deposited viable eggs on WAA colonies in laboratory cages, demonstrating that mated females will oviposit in captivity. Survivorship of eggs and larvae transported to NZ was good, yielding adult flies in containment in Auckland. Adult, virgin female H. calcarata reared from eggs in captivity developed mature oocytes, providing an important step toward future mating studies in containment. Oviposition and larval feeding studies examined aspects of the intraguild interactions between H. calcarata and Aphelinus mali (Haldeman) (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae), the sole biological control agent of WAA in NZ. Field tests using paired sentinel apple shoots with a non-parasitized or parasitized WAA colony revealed that although H. calcarata deposited eggs on both parasitized and non-parasitized colonies, fewest eggs were deposited on heavily parasitized colonies. Feeding studies showed that larval H. calcarata consumed fewer mummified aphids or aphids in an earlier stage of parasitization than non-parasitized aphids.
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