4.6 Article

Life history and behavior of Tamarixia triozae parasitizing the tomato-potato psyllid, Bactericera cockerelli

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
Volume 179, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2023.105152

Keywords

Eulophidae; Triozidae; Host instar; Parasitoid age; Host feeding; Oviposition

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Tamarixia triozae is a primary parasitoid of Bactericera cockerelli, a major pest of solanaceous crops. Research was conducted to understand the behavior and fitness consequences of T. triozae, including its feeding and oviposition preferences, and allocation of eggs to different host stages. The findings show that T. triozae feeds on mid-aged hosts and prefers to parasitize later instars, leading to mortality in all instars. Host feeding and parasitism peak in the first week of female life, while superparasitism decreases with increasing host density. Progeny fitness is positively correlated with host size at parasitism.
Tamarixia triozae is an important primary parasitoid of the tomato-potato psyllid, Bactericera cockerelli, a serious cosmopolitan pest of solanaceous crops. However, without better information about its life history and behavior, it will be difficult to use this parasitoid in effective biological control programs. We carried out a series of experiments to characterize its parasitism, adult feeding, and oviposition behaviors and its sex allocation in response to different life stages of its host, and their fitness consequences. We show that T. triozae females fed on all host instars with a preference for mid-aged ones, and preferred to parasitize later instars, thus inflicting mortality on all instars simultaneously. Host feeding and parasitism peaked during the first week of female life and declined markedly after two weeks. Parasitoids allocated more fertilized eggs to older and larger nymphs, and superparasitism declined with increasing host density. The oviposition rate of fertilized eggs peaked when females were four to five days old, with > 90 % of daughters produced during the first half of adult life. The body size and egg loads of progeny increased with increasing host instar at parasitism, demonstrating a positive relationship between the host size and offspring fitness.

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