Abstract

SUMMARYThe functional response of Encarsia formosa parasitising Trialeurodes vaporariorum on Phaseolus vulgaris was a typical type II functional response (Holling, 1959) where, with increasing host density, the numbers of hosts parasitised by a single parasitoid show a negatively accelerating rise to an upper plateau. A mean maximum parasitism of 6.6 per female per 24 h reached at host densities near 80 larvae per leaf was observed. When presented with insecticide (‘Pynosect 30 ULV’) deposits, the parasite's search pattern changed, conforming to a typical Sigmoid functional response curve. With a uniform cover spray deposit of 27.6 × 10‐7 ml/cm2 searching began only at host densities of c. 80 larvae per leaf and the mean maximum parasitism was only 1.5 per female per 24 h. When the insecticide deposit of 27.6 × 10‐7 ml/cm2 was in the form of discrete groups of 100 μm droplets, searching began at host densities of c. 40 larvae per leaf but the mean maximum parasitism was low at 2.2. However by using the same discrete deposit pattern but reducing the deposit level to 2.65 × 10‐7 ml/cm2 it was possible to obtain the same high mean maximum parasitism as with the untreated control.

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