Abstract
SUMMARYThe longevity of Sitobion avenae varied inversely with temperature from 25 to over 100 days when reared outdoors on barley under lantern jars, being longest between December and April–May. This was due mainly to changes in the length of the pre‐ and post‐reproductive periods rather than the length of the period of reproduction. Fecundity varied directly with temperature, from eight to sixty‐seven nymphs per female. When reared on winter wheat and sheltered from wind, rain and snow, S. avenae survived best, Metopolophium dirhodum survived less well and Rhopalosiphum padi worst; when exposed in the open none of the three species survived.Close relationships were not demonstrable between the numbers of alate M. dirhodum, S. avenae and Rhopalosiphum spp. trapped in any year, between the abundance of these aphids and weather conditions between January and April, or between the numbers of these alatae and the size of crop infestations. This was probably because insufficient information was available about their biology, both inside and outside the crop.
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