Abstract

To determine whether pollen is a significant food source for Balaustium cf. murorum (tentative identification), behavioural responses to pollen feeding were examined in short-range Petri plate bioassays. Evans blue dye was used as a tracer to stain pollen after being incorporated into the gut. The results show that all active stages (larva, deutonymph and adult) ingested whole pollen from viburnum shrub (Viburnum) and daffodil (Narcissus) cultivars. All active stages fed on all types of pollen tested: tulip (Tulipa), daffodil (Narcissus), pear (Pyrus), maple (Acer), viburnum (Viburnum) and crabapple (Malus) cultivars except for tulip in the adult and tulip, pear and crabapple in the deutonymph. A higher percentage of larvae fed on pollen-covered surfaces and cleared pollen at a faster rate than other life stages in the bioassays. Clearance of viburnum and daffodil pollen by larvae and deutonymphs was particularly rapid, but this shifted to maple and crabapple pollen in the adult. In pheromone bioassays, pollen-fed larvae, deutonymphs and adults did not prompt clustering or avoidance by free-ranging mites. Our conclusion is that B. murorum can feed on pollen from different sources, no attraction-aggregation pheromone or alarm pheromone is emitted by fed mites and pollen feeding is more important for larvae that emerge in early spring when other food options are scarce.

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