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Contribution to the biology of the citrus bud mite, Aceria sheldoni (Ewing) (Acarina: Eriophyidae)*
Authors:M. STERNLICHT &dagger  
Affiliation:Volcani Institute of Agricultural Research, Bet Dagan, Israel
Abstract:In laboratory studies mites of Aceria sheldoni were reared on citrus fruit peels, beneath coloured cellophane hoods, to cater for their thigmotaxis and sensitivity to light of particular wave lengths. Hatching was most successful at 25°C and 98% r.h. but was reduced by low humidities (35–40% r.h.), when abnormal dwarf larvae emerged. The eggs hatched in 3–14 days; the length of a generation (egg to egg) was 12–33 days. The threshold of embryonic development was 9 °C and that for completion of the life cycle, egg to egg, was 12.5 °C. The average number of eggs laid per female was six (4–8). It increased to twelve (5–19) if the mite, during its larval stages, had been fed on buds. The vitality of both the eggs and the mature mites was tested by exposure to extreme low and high temperatures (below 0 °C, 39 °C): 50% of mites died after 30 min at 30 °C; 50% died after 30 min at –15 °C or lower.
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