4.5 Article

A conservative oviposition preference in spider mites for complex habitats as a preventive strategy for reducing predation risk

Journal

ENTOMOLOGIA GENERALIS
Volume 42, Issue 3, Pages 389-401

Publisher

E SCHWEIZERBARTSCHE VERLAGSBUCHHANDLUNG
DOI: 10.1127/entomologia/2021/12820171-8177/2021/1282

Keywords

oviposition preference; habitat structure; trichomes; Tetranychus urticae; predation risk

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFD0201400, 2019YFD1002100]
  2. China Agriculture Research System [CARS-29-bc-4]

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The study demonstrates that females tend to prefer pubescent over glabrous leaf surfaces for oviposition, even in the presence of predators. This suggests that females have evolved a simple and conservative preference behavior to increase survival under unpredictable predation stress.
Selecting a suitable oviposition site is challenging for females due to the unpredictable nature of conditions for their future offspring. To increase survival in the face of uncertainty, egg-laying females may evolve a conservative prefer-ence strategy that simplifies decision complexity, even if such a strategy involves immediate costs. We used spider leaf mites, pubescent apple and glabrous pear leaves and two predatory species as a model system to test this hypothesis. The leaf mites persistently preferred pubescent over glabrous leaf surfaces for oviposition, regardless of the presence of preda-tors. The mites were attracted to cotton fibers on glabrous leaf surfaces, even though there were no direct fitness benefits. When predators co-existed with leaf mites, predation was significantly lower on pubescent leaves than glabrous leaves both in laboratory and in field experiments. These results support the notion that females used complex structures such as tri-chomes as a cue for oviposition, regardless of host quality or the presence of predators. This suggests that egg-laying females have evolved a simple and conservative preference behavior to increase survival under unpredictable predation stress, even with a fitness cost when predators are absent.

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