Abstract

Two broad classes of arthropod natural enemies attack insect herbivores: specialists and generalists. The tight dynamical linkage of specialist natural enemies and their prey may make the specialists able to respond numerically to, and perhaps suppress, herbivore outbreaks. Because generalist predators may attack not only herbivores, but also the herbivores' specialist natural enemies, generalist predators may disrupt control of herbivore populations rather than contribute to it. We examined interactions between pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum), a specialist parasitoid wasp (Aphidius ervi) that attacks the aphids, and a common generalist predator, carabid beetles (primarily Pterostichus melanarius). In two field experiments in alfalfa, we manipulated carabid densities to measure their direct (through predation) and indirect (through intraguild predation on A. ervi) impact on aphid population dynamics. The first experiment was initiated when plants were short (following cutting), and carabid predation of a...

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