Host utilization and fitness of the larval parasitoid Tetrastichus planipennisi are influenced by emerald ash borer’s food plants: Implications for biological control
-
Add time:07/23/2019 Source:sciencedirect.com
Emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis) is one of the most destructive, invasive forest pests in North America and is responsible for the death of hundreds of millions of ash trees (Fraxinus spp.) in its introduced host range. Recently, this invasive beetle was also discovered attacking the white fringetree (Chionanthus virginicus) in North America. In response to emerald ash borer’s lack of evolutionary history with this host plant, we hypothesize that this host range expansion will result in enemy free space from the introduced larval parasitoid Tetrastichus planipennisi. Here we conducted both No Choice and Choice assays to evaluate the parasitism response of T. planipennisi to the emerald ash borer larvae reared or inserted in white fringetree sticks vs sticks of the favored host plant, green ash (F. pennsylvanica). Additionally, we observed the host-finding behavior of T. planipennisi when given a choice with the two host plants infested with emerald ash borer larvae. The No Choice assay demonstrates that T. planipennisi is able to parasitize and successfully develop on emerald ash borer larvae reared in white fringetree sticks. Choice assays further show that T. planipennisi is capable of parasitizing suitable stages of emerald ash borer larvae inserted in white fringetree even with the presence of emerald ash borer infested green ash in the same assay arena. However, rates of the host larval parasitism by T. planipennisi were significantly lower in white fringetree sticks than in green ash sticks and T. planipennisi spent less time on white fringetree sticks than green ash. These findings suggest that emerald ash borer may experience partial enemy free space through the utilization of white fringetree as an alternative host to ash, and thus biological control of emerald ash borer in white fringetrees with T. planipennisi may be less effective than in ash trees.
We also recommend Trading Suppliers and Manufacturers of EMERALD GREEN (cas 12000-21-4). Pls Click Website Link as below: cas 12000-21-4 suppliers
Prev:Semiotic distribution of responsibility: an ethnography of overburden in Colombia’s emerald economy
Next:Evaluating the population viability of green ash trees (Fraxinus pennsylvanica) before and after the emerald ash borer beetle (Agrilus planipennis) invasion) - 【Back】【Close 】【Print】【Add to favorite 】
- Related Information
- Gemmological Investigations on Pearls and Emeralds using Neutron Imaging07/27/2019
- Nostalgia for war and the paradox of peace in the Colombian emerald trade07/26/2019
- Gemstone supply chains and development in Pakistan: Analyzing the post-Taliban emerald economy in the Swat Valley07/25/2019
- Evaluating the population viability of green ash trees (Fraxinus pennsylvanica) before and after the emerald ash borer beetle (Agrilus planipennis) invasion07/24/2019
- Semiotic distribution of responsibility: an ethnography of overburden in Colombia’s emerald economy07/22/2019
- ‘A green thought in a green shade’; Compositional and typological observations concerning the production of EMERALD GREEN (cas 12000-21-4) glass vessels in the 1st century A.D.07/20/2019
- Use of Agro-waste Musa acuminata and Solanum tuberosum peels for economical sorptive removal of EMERALD GREEN (cas 12000-21-4) dye in ecofriendly way07/21/2019


