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Mango powdery mildew Oidium mangiferae an alternative food for the predatory mites Typhlodromus mangiferus and Typhlodromips swirskii (Phytoseiidae) in absence or presence increasing prey density of Oligonichus mangiferus (Tetranychidae) in Egypt
Authors:Badawi A. Abou-Awad  Sahar I. Afia  Mahmoud M. Al-Azzazy
Affiliation:1. Plant Protection Department , National Research Centre , Dokki, Cairo, Egypt badawi_abou_awad@hotmail.com;3. Plant Protection Department , National Research Centre , Dokki, Cairo, Egypt;4. Department of Agricultural Zoology and Nematology , Faculty of Agriculture, Al-Azhar University , Cairo, Egypt
Abstract:The predacious mites, Typhlodromus mangiferus Zaher and El-Borolossy and Typhlodromips swirskii (Athias-Henriot), reproduced successfully on mango powdery mildew Oidium mangiferae Berthet in absence or presence of spider mite prey Oligonichus mangiferus (Rahman and Sapra) under laboratory conditions of 25 ± 1°C and 60–65% R.H. Adult female of both predators consumed protonymphs of O. mangiferus at different experimental densities. The consumption rate increased with increasing prey densities up to 25 protonymphs/female/day and decreased significantly at 35 and 50 protonymphs/female/day for the two predatory mites. Addition of powdery mildew conidia to each prey density significantly reduced consumption of spider mites at 35 and 50 protonymphs/female/day. Mean eggs/female/day by T. swirskii and T. mangiferus was 0.30 and 0.72 when reared on powdery mildew conidia compared with 1.64 and 1.57 when fed on powdery mildew and tetranychid prey, respectively. This increase in reproduction would have compensated the reduction in protonymph prey consumption due to the presence of mildew conidia. Mite–mildew interactions are discussed.
Keywords:Oidium mangiferae  Oligonichus mangiferus  alternative food  mango powdery mildew  predatory mites  prey consumption
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