Abstract

Aphid-infested cereal trap plants were used to detect the effects of aphid sex pheromone components on aphid parasitoid activity in arable field margins. The presence of aphid sex pheromones significantly increased parasitization levels by aphid parasitoids on the plants. By placing plants alongside and at varying distances away from a pheromone-releasing vial, the technique was used to measure the distance over which a point source of aphid sex pheromone could increase parasitization levels. Pheromone-releasing vials significantly increased parasitization by the generalist parasitoid Praon volucre on plants adjacent to vials and on plants placed 20 cm away. When the distance between pheromone-releasing vials and aphid-infested plants was increased to 1 m, parasitization by P. volucre was increased only on the plant adjacent to the vial, whereas parasitization by the specialist parasitoid Aphidius rhopalosiphi was also increased on plants placed 1 m away. This indicates a possible difference between the parasitoids in their foraging behaviour in response to semiochemical cues during host selection. When the experiment was repeated with some trap plants placed 3 m away from the pheromone-releasing vial, parasitization was again concentrated on plants directly alongside the vial, but only P. volucre appeared to be active in the field at the time of this experiment, so the effect on A. rhopalosiphi could not be assessed. The results are encouraging for the prospects of using aphid sex pheromones to manipulate parasitoids in order to improve aphid population control.

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