4.4 Article

Tethered and untethered flight by Lygus hesperus and Lygus lineolaris (Heteroptera: Miridae)

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 5, Pages 1389-1400

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1603/0046-225X-33.5.1389

Keywords

western tarnished plant bug; tarnished plant bug; flight mill; vertical flight chamber; flight behavior; egg load

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We compared the flight behavior of Lygus hesperus Knight and Lygus lineolaris (Palisot de Beauvois) relative to age, sex, and time of day by using tethered (flight mills) and untethered flight (vertical flight chamber) assays. Both species and sexes initiated flights throughout the day, and flight mill assays recorded flights throughout the night. For both species and flight systems, most flights were < 5 min in duration, with longest flights occurring from 1 to 3 wk of age. Number of flights and flight duration were influenced by age and sex for tethered individuals and by sex for untethered individuals. Species differences were less apparent, but tethered L. lineolaris had more sustained flights (individual flights > 5 min) that were of longer cumulative duration compared with L. hesperus. The longest flights were obtained with flight mills and were 17-18 times longer than the longest flight (22 min) in the flight chamber. Determination of flight periodicity, throughout the day and night, was only possible for tethered insects, and females exhibited more distinct periodicities for sustained flights than males. For L. hesperus females, sustained flights followed a diurnal to crepuscular periodicity, whereas sustained flights by L. lineolaris females were nocturnal. No significant correlations were found between egg load and any of the flight parameters when grouped by species, but there was a positive correlation between the number of spermatophores and several of the flight parameters for female L. hesperus. In the vertical flight chamber, takeoffs began at low light levels and were always higher for L. lineolaris than L. hesperus. Rates of climb toward the skylight cue were approximate to50 cm/s, indicating a capacity for strong, self-directed flight by both species.

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