Abstract

AbstractAugmentative biological control by predaceous ladybird beetles can be improved by using flightless morphs, which have longer residence times on the host plants. The two‐spot ladybird beetle, Adalia bipunctata (L.) (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae), is used for the biological control of aphids in greenhouses and on urban trees. Flightlessness due to truncated wings occurs at very low frequency in some natural populations of A. bipunctata. Pure‐breeding strains of this 'wingless' genotype of A. bipunctata can easily be obtained in the laboratory. Such strains have not been commercialized yet due to concerns about their reduced fitness compared to wild‐type strains, which renders mass production more expensive. Wingless strains exhibit, however, wide intra‐population phenotypic variation in the extent of wing truncation which is related to fitness traits. We here use classical quantitative genetic techniques to study the heritability and genetic architecture of variation in wing truncation in a wingless strain of A. bipunctata. Split‐families reared at one of two temperatures revealed strong family‐by‐temperature interaction: heritability was estimated as 0.64 ± 0.09 at 19 °C and 0.29 ± 0.06 at 29 °C. Artificial selection in opposite directions at 21 °C demonstrated that the degree of wing truncation can be altered within a few generations resulting in wingless phenotypes without any wing tissue (realized h2 = 0.72), as well as those with minimal truncations (realized h2 = 0.61) in two replicates. The latter lines produced more than twice as many individuals. This indicates that selective breeding of wing truncation may be exploited to improve mass rearing of flightless strains of A. bipunctata for commercial biological control. Our work illustrates that cryptic variation can also be a source for the selective breeding of natural enemies.

Highlights

  • The augmentative biological control of aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae) with predaceous ladybird beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) has variable success

  • We observed a rapid response in degree of winglessness’ (DWL) to artificial selection in the replicate lines in both directions (Figure 3)

  • Selective breeding of wingless Adalia bipunctata Our results show that the extent of wing truncation in wingless strains of A. bipunctata is highly heritable, and can quickly be altered by selective breeding

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Summary

Introduction

The augmentative biological control of aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae) with predaceous ladybird beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) has variable success. Failures of aphid control have been associated, among others, with the tendency of the adult beetles to fly away from the host plants soon after release, whether in greenhouses (H€am€al€ainen, 1977), urban trees (Brakefield, 1984), or. Pure-breeding wingless strains of the wingless (homozygote recessive) genotype can be obtained from outcrossing a single wild-collected individual carrying the wingless trait Such wingless strains of A. bipunctata showed the same voracity towards aphids as their winged conspecifics (Lommen et al, 2008). They improved control of Myzus persicae Sulzer aphids on single pepper plants in experiments in the greenhouse (Lommen et al, 2008), and reduced the amount of honeydew underneath aphid-infested urban lime trees (Lommen et al, 2013)

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