Abstract

AbstractModes of passive dispersal of the grape rust mite Calepitrimerus vitis (Eriophyoidea) were investigated in a vineyard of South‐Western Germany. More than 200 Eriophyoidea per month were trapped in a wind chamber during summer (32,1 % C. vitis) suggesting long‐distance dispersal by air currents. Rain washed part of the adult C. vitis population from the foliage. SE micrographs suggest that quiescent nymphs are affixed to the leaf by a substance of unknown nature. However, the role of rain in C. vitis colonisation of uninfested vineyards is still unclear, as is the role of phoretic transport by arthropods. For the first time, evidence of rust mite dispersal by human activity is presented. A large number of C. vitis was found adhering to clothes and hands of workers carrying out customary cultural practices in the vineyard. Other arthropods, including Typhlodromus pyri, the main predator of C. vitis, were also passively transported by wind, rain and human activity.

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