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Augmentation of beneficial arthropods by strip-management. 3. Artificial introduction of a spider species which preys on wheat pest insects
Authors:C. Heidger  W. Nentwig
Affiliation:1. Fachbereich Biologie der Universit?t, Lahnberge, D-3550, Marburg, Federal Republic of Germany
2. Institut für Zoologie der Universit?t, Baltzerstrasse 3, CH. 3012, Bern, Switzerland
Abstract:During a 3-year-experiment on strip-management a population of the spiderDictyna arundinacea (L.) was released in a winter wheat field.D. arundinacea built its webs with high preference at the ears of the wheat and 26–28% of the released spiders were rediscovered at the marked first web-sites some weeks later. Enclosure studies and prey samples from several sub-populations showed thatD. arundinacea caught almost exclusively wheat pest insects, withOscinella frit (L.), cereal aphids [Sitobion avenae (F.) andRhopalosiphum padi (L.); mainly winged specimens] and thysanopterans as main prey groups.D. arundinacea moved from the release site into adjacent successional strips, where it survived the harvest and successfully overwintered. From here, a repopulation of the wheat-strips in the next year occurred but the total abundance was so low that after this two-fold habitat change no high population density was reached. The ability of spiders, as unspecialized predators, to prey on wheat pest insects and the suitability of successional strips to preserve high spider densities by habitat change during harvest or other critical events are discussed.
Keywords:Biological pest control  wheat pests  aphids  spiders  habitat management
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