The diet choice of omnivores feeding on two adjacent trophic levels (either plants and herbivores or herbivores and predators) has been studied extensively. However, omnivores usually feed on more than two trophic levels, and this diet choice and its consequences for population dynamics have hardly been studied. We report how host-plant quality affects the diet choice of western flower thrips feeding on three trophic levels: plants (cucumber or sweet pepper), eggs of spider mites and eggs of a predatory mite that attacks spider mites. Spider mites feed on the same host plants as thrips and produce a web that hampers predator mobility. To assess the indirect effects of spider mites on predation by thrips, the thrips were offered spider-mite ...
To test the hypothesis that pest species diversity enhances biological pest control with generalist ...
The western flower thrips is an omnivorous insect that consumes both leaf tissue and spider mite egg...
With the increased use of biological control agents, artificial food webs are created in agricultura...
Omnivores obtain resources from more than one trophic level, and choose their food based on quantity...
Theory predicts that the balance of nutritional needs, food availability, and the quality of particu...
Second-instar larvae of the phytophagous thrips, Thrips tabaci, consumed significantly more spider m...
Herbivorous arthropods use various cues to choose suitable host plants. We investigated whether thre...
Resource competition among herbivorous arthropods has long been viewed as unimportant because herbiv...
Supplying predators with alternative food can have short-term positive effects on prey densities thr...
International audienceStudying antagonistic coevolution between host plants and herbivores is partic...
Prey refuges are expected to affect population dynamics, but direct experimental tests of this hypot...
The negative cross-talk between induced plant defences against pathogens and arthropod herbivores is...
Few studies have tested how plant quality and the presence of competitors interact in determining ho...
Plant defensive substances can affect the quality of herbivores as prey for predators either directl...
To test the hypothesis that pest species diversity enhances biological pest control with generalist ...
The western flower thrips is an omnivorous insect that consumes both leaf tissue and spider mite egg...
With the increased use of biological control agents, artificial food webs are created in agricultura...
Omnivores obtain resources from more than one trophic level, and choose their food based on quantity...
Theory predicts that the balance of nutritional needs, food availability, and the quality of particu...
Second-instar larvae of the phytophagous thrips, Thrips tabaci, consumed significantly more spider m...
Herbivorous arthropods use various cues to choose suitable host plants. We investigated whether thre...
Resource competition among herbivorous arthropods has long been viewed as unimportant because herbiv...
Supplying predators with alternative food can have short-term positive effects on prey densities thr...
International audienceStudying antagonistic coevolution between host plants and herbivores is partic...
Prey refuges are expected to affect population dynamics, but direct experimental tests of this hypot...
The negative cross-talk between induced plant defences against pathogens and arthropod herbivores is...
Few studies have tested how plant quality and the presence of competitors interact in determining ho...
Plant defensive substances can affect the quality of herbivores as prey for predators either directl...
To test the hypothesis that pest species diversity enhances biological pest control with generalist ...
The western flower thrips is an omnivorous insect that consumes both leaf tissue and spider mite egg...
With the increased use of biological control agents, artificial food webs are created in agricultura...