Abstract

AbstractThe cold hardiness of arthropods is an important characteristic associated with overwintering success. Cold‐tolerant stages affect overwintering strategy, especially in arthropods that continuously feed on evergreen host plants in temperate regions. However, cold hardiness to mildly low temperature is rarely investigated. In the present study, we estimate the stage‐specific cold hardiness of a population of the spider mite Stigmaeopsis longus (Saito) (Acari: Tetranychidae) occurring on evergreen Sasa bamboo in a temperate area (Kochi City, southwestern Japan). Individuals of each stage developing under diapause‐inducing conditions (LD 10 : 14 h at 20 °C) are maintained at 4 °C (approximating the mean daily minimum temperature for December in Kochi City) for 30 days (eggs are cooled immediately, without short‐day development first). They are then returned to the initial conditions to assess survival rates. The survival rate of adult females (i.e. the diapausing stage) is high (99.5%), as is that of adult males and deutonymphs of both sexes (84.2–98.7% and 89.7–89.8%, respectively). The survival rate of mobile immature stages tends to increase toward adulthood in both sexes, whereas the survival rate of the eggs and quiescent stages is extremely low (16–23% and 0–20%, respectively). The poor cold hardiness of the eggs and quiescent stages presumably prevents the normal development of immature individuals during winter.

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