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Research article2012Peer reviewed

Plant-mediated effects of different Salix species on the performance of the braconid parasitoid Perilitus brevicollis

Stenberg, Johan A

Abstract

The blue willow beetle, Phratora vulgatissima, is considered to be the most damaging herbivorous pest in Salix short-rotation coppices throughout Europe. The braconid parasitoid Perilitus brevicollis is an important natural enemy of Phratora. As several different Salix species are used in coppices, I investigated the bottom-up (tritrophic) effects of Salix on the parasitoid. Three host plants were studied: the introduced fast-growing S. viminalis, which is highly susceptible to the beetle; S. dasyclados, which is introduced and moderately-resistant to the beetle; and the native slow-growing Salix cinerea, which is not currently used in coppices. The identity of the host-plant species had significant effects on parasitoid larval development time; parasitoids developed rapidly on the susceptible S. viminalis and slowly on the moderately resistant S. dasyclados. Increased development time resulted in reduced adult longevity. Host-plant species identity also affected larval survival; 57%, 64%, and 49% of the parasitoids successfully completed larval development in beetles fed S. viminalis, S. cinerea, and S. dasyclados, respectively. Parasitoid development was also correlated with the body size of their beetle host, but this effect was independent of the identity of the host-plant species. The results of this study suggest that the parasitoid has higher survival and growth rates when it parasitizes beetles feeding on the common coppice species S. viminalis, but the performance of the parasite is reduced when the beetle feeds on the moderately-resistant S. dasyclados. Conversely, the omnivorous biocontrol agents sometimes used in these systems appear to perform better on S. dasyclados compared to S. viminalis. The results of this study suggest that Perilitus parasitoids and omnivorous beetle predators may provide complementary protection to Salix and therefore be useful in coppice management. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Keywords

Perilitus brevicollis; Phratora vulgatissima; Trophic interaction; Host-plant quality; Biological control; Salix

Published in

Biological Control
2012, Volume: 60, number: 1, pages: 54-58
Publisher: ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Renewable Bioenergy Research
    Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
    Agricultural Science

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocontrol.2011.09.004

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/56398