1. Choosing natural enemies for conservation biological control: use of the prey detectability half-life to rank key predators of Colorado potato beetle
- Author
-
Daniel L. Rowley, Zsofia Szendrei, Mark E. Payton, Donald C. Weber, Thomas C. Coudron, and Matthew H. Greenstone
- Subjects
biology ,ved/biology ,Ecology ,Perillus bioculatus ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Colorado potato beetle ,Pentatomidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Predation ,Insect Science ,Coccinellidae ,Predator ,Leptinotarsa ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Trophic level - Abstract
Determining relative strengths of trophic links is critical for ranking predators for conservation biological control. Molecular gut-content analysis enables ranking by incidence of prey remains in the gut, but differential digestive rates bias such rankings toward predators with slower rates. This bias can be reduced by indexing each predator’s half-life to that of the middle-most half-life in a predator complex. We demonstrate this with data from key species in the predator complex of Colorado potato beetle (CPB), Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), comprising adults and immatures of four taxonomically diverse species. These animals display order-of-magnitude variation in detectability half-life for the cytochrome oxidase I DNA sequence of a single CPB egg: from 7.0 h in larval Coleomegilla maculata (DeGeer) (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) to 84.4 h in nymphal Perillus bioculatus (Fabricius) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae). The raw species-specific incidence of L. decemlineata DNA in the guts of 351 field-collected predators ranged from 11 to 95%, ranking them as follows: C. maculata adults
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF