Abstract

Weeds can play numerous important roles in pest suppression in agroecosystems. These include influencing the host searching behaviors of herbivorous pests and their natural enemies and providing shelter and alternative food sources for predators and parasitoids. Virginia pepperweed, Lepidium virginicum, is a widespread naturalized weed in Hawaii and can often be found in and around agricultural fields. It is a member of the Brassicaceae family and is a known host plant of the diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella. In this study, we found that DBM preferentially oviposit on L. virginicum (vegetative stage) when presented with a choice of cabbage. Using laboratory and semi-field trials, we investigated the responses of the natural enemies of DBM to the vegetative stage of L. virginicum and cabbage infested with DBM larvae. When DBM-infested plants were placed in the field for 48 h, more spiders and parasitized DBM larvae were recovered from the L. virginicum than from cabbage. In laboratory choice experiments, we demonstrated that the dominant DBM parasitoid species in Hawaii (Cotesia vestalis) oviposited in more host larvae on L. virginicum compared to cabbage, though this had no particular benefit for parasitoid development (adult size and sex ratio). Our findings suggest that the presence of L. virginicum in cabbage agroecosystems could be beneficial by serving to divert DBM oviposition away from cabbage and promoting predator and parasitoid populations.

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