Abstract

AbstractTwo‐ and three‐trophic‐level effects of resistant soybean plants on the development and fecundity of the predator Nabis roseipennis Reuter (Hemiptera: Nabidae) were determined. The nabids, like many hemipteran predators, feed on plants as well as arthropod prey. The life history traits of N. roseipennis when feeding on Pseudoplusia includens (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) fed the resistant soybean cultivar PI 229358 or the susceptible Cobb' and while exposed to these resistant and susceptible soybean cultivars or a no‐plant control were determined. Nymphal survival of N. roseipennis was unaffected by either prey or plant treatment. Development time was extended and fecundity of N. roseipennis was reduced by feeding on prey fed the resistant plant but not by exposure to resistant soybean plants. Thus, three‐trophic‐level effects of the resistant cultivar PI 229358 on prey quality were more important than two‐trophic‐level effects of direct plant feeding on development and fecundity of N. roseipennis. Consistency of these results with those of other predatory hemipterans and the potential impact of diet composition on the effects of resistant plants are discussed.

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