Abstract

The oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis, is a destructive polyphagous pest that causes damage to various fruit crops, and their distribution is currently expanding worldwide. Temperature is an important abiotic factor that influences insect population dynamics and distribution by affecting their survival, development, and reproduction. We examined the fecundity, pre-oviposition and oviposition periods, and longevity of adult B. dorsalis at various constant temperatures ranging from13°C to 35°C. The longevity of female B. dorsalis ranged from 116.8 days (18.8°C) to 22.4 days (34.9°C), and the maximum fecundity per female was 1,684 eggs at 28.1°C. Females were only able to lay eggs at 16.7°C to 34.9°C, and both the pre-oviposition and oviposition periods were different depending on the temperature. We modeled female reproduction in two oviposition models (OMs): 1) the current model developed by Kim and Lee, an OM composed of a fecundity model, age-specific survival model, and age-specific cumulative oviposition rate model, and 2) a two-phase OM modified the logic structure of the current model by separating pre-oviposition, so that oviposition was estimated with the female in oviposition phase who had complete pre-oviposition phase. The results of the two-phase OM provided more realistic outputs at lower and higher temperatures than those of the current model. We discussed the usefulness of the two-phase OM for the reproduction of insects with long pre-oviposition periods.

Highlights

  • The oriental fruit fly Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae) is a destructive polyphagous pest that damages various fruits by piercing the skin for oviposition and consequent fruit destruction caused by hatched larva

  • Pupae were placed in a plastic netted cage (30 x 30 cm) and emerged as adults, who were fed an artificial diet composed of 200 g Yeast Hydrolysate Enzymatic (MP Biomedicals, LLC., Illkirch-Graffenstaden, France), 40 g granulated sugar, 10

  • Approximately 4 mL of eggs were inoculated into a container (90 x 15 mm) filled with an artificial diet composed of 5 g sodium benzoate

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Summary

Introduction

The oriental fruit fly Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae) is a destructive polyphagous pest that damages various fruits by piercing the skin for oviposition and consequent fruit destruction caused by hatched larva. B. dorsalis cause economic damage to the food industry due to market loss or reduction [1,2]. Their distribution has rapidly expanded from their location of origin in South Asia to northern and eastern nations and islands, including Taiwan, Japan, and the Pacific Islands in the 1900s [2, 3,4,5,6].

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