4.5 Article

Spodoptera frugiperda egg mass scale thickness modulates Trichogramma parasitoid performance

Journal

ENTOMOLOGIA GENERALIS
Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 589-596

Publisher

E SCHWEIZERBARTSCHE VERLAGSBUCHHANDLUNG
DOI: 10.1127/entomologia/2022/1443

Keywords

fall armyworm; physical defense; oviposition; parasitism; biological control; Trichogramma dendrolimi

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2019YFD0300105]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31901946]

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This study investigated the impact of scale thickness on fall armyworm (FAW) egg masses and the parasitoid performance of Trichogramma. The results showed that scale thickness decreases with the age of FAW females. Thinner scale layers result in higher parasitism rates by Trichogramma.
The fall armywonn (FAW) Spodoptera frugiperda (Smith) is a major agricultural pest in Americas, Africa and Asia. Egg masses are covered with scale layers and the various scale layer thicknesses of these masses can affect parasitoids efficiency. The present study aimed to determine dynamics of the scale thickness on egg masses and its effect on Trichogramma parasitoid performance. The scale thickness ranged from 0 mu m to 400 mu m and can be graded in three levels. Level I was the naked egg masses without or covered with a thin scale, and the thickness was below 80 mu m. Level II was medium covered, with scales where 20%-80% eggs could be seen; the thickness was between 80 mu m to 180 mu m. Level III was fully-covered with scales and the thickness was above 180 gm (up to 400 gm). The egg mass scale thickness decreased with increasing age of egg laying FAW females; the proportion at level I increased during female aging, while proportion of levels II and III decreased during oviposition period. During FAW female lifetime, the level I showed the highest proportion (51.9%) while the level III showed the lowest (9.9%). The parasitism rate of FAW eggs by Trichogramma dendrolimi varied according to scale thickness, with higher parasitism on eggs and egg masses at level I (31.6%, 78.3%, respectively) and lowest parasitism on level III (eggs: 1.9%; egg masses: 23.1%). We documented factors modulating parasitism effectiveness on FAW and we suggested that timely parasitoid releases targeting egg masses at Level I scale thickness could enable maximizing biocontrol service provided by Trichogramma on FAW.

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