Unlikely Guardians of Cropping Cystems: Can Birds and Spiders Protect Broccoli from Caterpillar Pests?

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2007-05
Authors
Hooks, Cerruti R2
Pandey, Raju R.
Johnson, Marshall W.
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University of Hawaii
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Abstract
A field experiment was conducted to examine the impact of bird and spider predation on lepidopteran caterpillar densities and broccoli productivity. Densities of Pieris rapae and Trichoplusia ni large caterpillars and their post-caterpillar stages were reduced significantly by bird predation. The abundance of large caterpillars was also reduced on plants where spiders were allowed to forage freely. Further, plants foraged by birds, spiders, or birds plus spiders sustained less feeding damage attributable to leaf-chewing caterpillars than plants without birds or spiders (the check). Plants foraged by bird and/or spiders were also larger than check plants.
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Araneae, Pieris rapae, Hawaii, pest management, Brassica oleracea, biological control
Citation
Hooks CR, Pandey RR, Johnson MW. 2007. Unlikely guardians of cropping systems: Can birds and spiders protect broccoli from caterpillar pests? Honolulu (HI): University of Hawaii. 6 p. (Insect Pests; IP-26).
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6 pages
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