Abstract

Epigeic polyphagous predatory beetles can regulate the pest abundance. The range of population densities at which regulation is possible is specific to each predator-prey subsystem and can be determined experimentally. In the subsystem of ground and rove beetles (Carabidae and Staphylinidae) and the cabbage maggot Delia brassicae Bouche and in that of Carabus hampei Kust. and the Colorado potato beetle Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say, regulation occurs at low pest densities: in the former subsystem, at oviposition rates not exceeding 3 eggs per day per plant, and in the latter, at the pest density varying from 1 to 36 eggs per potato plant. Within these density ranges, both the absolute and relative number of pest individuals eliminated by the predatory beetles increase. The maximum fraction of the pests destroyed by these entomophages is observed at medium prey population densities, which corresponds to functional response of type III (Holling, 1965).

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