Zoophytophagous plant bugs (Heteroptera, Miridae) increasingly attract interest as agents of biological plant protection. In the laboratory experiment, the effects of the day length and temperature on the duration of the pre-adult period and on induction of facultative winter adult diapause were studied in Dicyphus errans (Wolff, 1804) collected in Italy. The experiment demonstrated that at 20°C the duration of the pre-adult period of D. errans significantly depended on the day length. On average, females developed 1.3 days longer than males and, at the same time, the day length equally influenced the duration of the pre-adult period in both sexes. The pre-adult period was the shortest under short-day conditions (10 to 12 h of light per day), reached its maximum at day length of 14 h, but then decreased at 15 h, and at day length of 16 h it was as short as under short-day conditions. Also, a pronounced long-day type photoperiodic response of adult diapause induction was recorded in females of D. errans at 20°C: under short-day conditions (10 to 14 h of light per day) almost all females entered diapause, whereas under long-day conditions (15 and 16 h of light per day) about 90% of females were mature. The threshold of this photoperiodic response was close to 14 h 30 min. The mean (± S.D.) egg load of mature females was 6.3 ± 4.0 eggs per female and did not depend on the day length at which the female was reared before and after the final molt. When photoperiodic response of adult diapause induction was observed at two constant temperatures (20 and 25°C), the proportion of mature females depended significantly on the day length but not on the temperature: the shapes of the photoperiodic response curves of diapause induction were almost the same within the near-threshold zone at 20 and 25°C, i.e., the photoperiodic response was thermostable. The set of two photoperiodic responses manifested at different stages of the species’ life cycle has an obvious adaptive significance. In Central Europe, D. errans has 2 or 3 generations per year and hibernates at the adult stage. Due to the thermostable photoperiodic response, females enter diapause always at the same time at the end of summer, regardless of the weather conditions of a particular year. When oviposition and pre-adult development are extended over a prolonged period in summer, nymphs from the later eggs might not be able to molt to adults in due time and then fully prepare for stable winter diapause. Under such circumstances, the photoperiodic response controlling the rates of pre-adult development acquires apparent adaptive meaning: with an autumnal shortening of the day length to 10–12 h, even under conditions of seasonal decrease in temperature, the rates of nymphal development increase and, thus, the chances of nymphs from the later eggs to molt to adults and properly prepare for overwintering also increase. The new data should be taken into account when analyzing the seasonal cycle of D. errans and developing the programs of mass rearing of this zoophytophagous mirid as an agent of biological plant protection.
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