Abstract

AbstractThe Asian citrus psyllid, Diaphorina citri, is a vector of the bacterial pathogen, Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (CLas) that is believed to cause huanglongbing (HLB), also known as citrus greening disease. This phytopathogen can manipulate its vectors directly by modifying behaviour and altering fitness and indirectly by reducing host plant quality, which may affect the predation efficiency of natural enemies. Little is known about how this phytopathogen may affect third tropic level predators. The purpose of this investigation was to determine if the CLas pathogen modifies interactions between D. citri and its predators. We tested whether CLas infection of psyllids indirectly affects fitness of a key predator, the lady beetle Harmonia axyridis. We provided ladybeetles with 10 infected or uninfected adult psyllids in choice bioassays and measured the consumption rate over 24 h. Similarly, 15 infected or uninfected adult psyllids were provided to ladybeetles in no‐choice bioassays and feeding rates and net weight gain of male and female beetles were measured over 5 consecutive days. Fecundity and fertility of lady beetles feeding on CLas‐infected D. citri was reduced compared with those feeding on uninfected D. citri, and oocyte development appeared diminished in those beetles feeding on infected compared with uninfected psyllids. However, in choice assays, beetles did not distinguish between CLas‐infected and uninfected psyllids. We postulate that CLas may reduce the nutritional quality of psyllids diminishing fecundity and fertility of their predatory beetles. Our results lead us to speculate that under conditions of near 100% HLB infection, as occurs endemically in Florida, effectiveness of biological control for D. citri may benefit from provisioning ladybeetle predators with alternative hosts of higher nutritional quality or augmentative releases of laboratory‐reared predators.

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