Abstract

Nesidiocoris tenuis (Reuter) (Heteroptera: Miridae) is a tropical mirid bug used as a biocontrol agent in protected crops, including tomatoes. Although N. tenuis predates important insect pests, especially whitefly, it also causes damage by feeding on tomato plants when prey populations decline, resulting in significant economic losses for growers. The pest is now established in some all-year-round tomato crops in Europe and control measures involve the application of pesticides which are incompatible with current IPM programs. As part of future IPM strategies, the pheromone of N. tenuis was investigated. Volatile collections were made from groups and individuals of mated and unmated, females and males. In analyses of these collections by gas chromatography coupled with electroantennographic (EAG) recording from antennae of male bugs, two EAG-active components were detected and identified as 1-octanol and octyl hexanoate. Unlike other mirids, both male and female N. tenuis produced the two compounds, before and after mating, and both sexes gave EAG responses to both compounds. Furthermore, only octyl hexanoate was detected in whole body solvent washes from both sexes. These compounds are not related to the derivatives of 3-hydroxybutyrate esters found as pheromone components in other members of the Bryocrinae sub-family, and the latter could not be detected in volatiles from N. tenuis and did not elicit EAG responses. Nevertheless, experiments carried out in commercial glasshouses showed that traps baited with a blend of the synthetic pheromone components caught essentially only male N. tenuis, and significantly more than traps baited with octyl hexanoate alone. The latter caught significantly more N. tenuis than unbaited traps which generally caught very few bugs. Traps at plant height caught more N. tenuis males than traps 1 m above or at the base of the plants. The trap catches provided an indication of population levels of N. tenuis and were greatly reduced following an application of insecticide.

Highlights

  • Nesidiocoris tenuis (Reuter) (Heteroptera: Miridae) is an omnivorous mirid bug of tropical origin which is used as a biological control agent for protected crops in Mediterranean countries (Biondi et al 2016; Pérez-Hedo et al 2021)

  • No EAG response was observed to the cocoa mirid pheromone components, hexyl (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate (IV) and hexyl (R)-3-[(E)-2-butenoyl]-butyrate) (V), but a small response was sometimes observed to the proposed pheromone component of M. pygmaeus, hexyl (R)-3-acetoxybutyrate (VI) (Fig. 4)

  • Two components of the sex pheromone produced by adult female N. tenuis have been identified as 1-octanol and octyl hexanoate

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Summary

Introduction

Nesidiocoris tenuis (Reuter) (Heteroptera: Miridae) is an omnivorous mirid bug of tropical origin which is used as a biological control agent for protected crops in Mediterranean countries (Biondi et al 2016; Pérez-Hedo et al 2021). The use of N. tenuis as a biological control agent is controversial. This bug has a preference for prey, it can start feeding on the crop when prey is absent (Nakaishi et al 2011; Pérez-Hedo and Urbaneja 2016; Sanchez 2008). In some northern European countries N. tenuis has become invasive in glasshouses and the pest is threatening the 180 ha of tomatoes grown in the UK (Jacobson 2019)

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