Abstract

SummaryThe cold tolerance and overwintering survival of the quarantine regulated pest and virus vector, Thrips palmi (Karny) (Thysanoptera: Thripidae), is examined and discussed in terms of its establishment potential in the U.K. Thrips palmi adults and first‐instar larvae have a wide distribution of supercooling points (SCPs) but show ‘pre‐freeze’ mortality as a result of both acute and chronic exposures to temperatures above the SCP range. Thrips palmi did not develop enhanced cold tolerance in response to cues previously shown to cold‐acclimate other thrips species. The acute cold tolerance of T. palmi is higher than that of the recently established and biologically similar species, Frankliniella occidentalis, which is thought to be capable only of very limited winter survival outdoors in the U.K. However, the more ecologically meaningful chronic assays reveal the opposite pattern. If introduced to the U.K., overwintering of T. palmi would thus be largely restricted to protected environments, as its cold tolerance is insufficient to permit outdoor survival for a complete winter. This assertion was demonstrated by caged populations that died out after as little as 25 days in outdoor winter conditions in Yorkshire, U.K. The reversal of relative tolerance of the two species when considering chronic and acute assays suggests that these forms of low temperature mortality have different physiological bases, and emphasizes the need to use both forms of assay in assessments of overwintering capacity.

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