Mate location and sexual maturity of adult male mealybugs: narrow window of opportunity in a short lifetime.
2009
The identification of sex pheromones of several mealybug species has facilitated the development of monitoring techniques and management tactics based on these compounds. However, experience shows that the efficiency of tactics such as mass trapping, mating disruption, and lure and kill may be constrained by a lack of knowledge of basic features of the life history and mating behaviour of male insects and the mechanisms involved in their interactions with pheromone sources. Unlike neotenic adult females, male mealybugs are active fliers, do not feed and live only a few days. We study the time a male mealybug invests in mate location and mating. We tested the amount of time needed for a male of the citrus mealybug, Planococcus citri (Risso) to reach sexual maturation in a Petri dish. The response of males of different ages to a synthetic pheromone and virgin females was tested. Males from three different age classes (Iup to 10 hours after eclosion; II10-29 hours after eclosion; III29 or more hours after eclosion) were exposed to 100 ng of pheromone or a virgin female and the occurrence of a clear response, with copulation behaviour within 30 minutes of exposure, was noted. The insects’ survival rate, in terms of time, was also determined. In a parallel study, we also examined daily flight activity rhythms based on the number of male mealybugs captured each hour in pheromone traps in a citrus orchard. In the Petri dish bioassay, no class I males and less than 20% of class II males responded to the pheromone or virgin females. On the other hand, most of class III males presented a clear response. Data suggest that, after eclosion, most P. citri males need to complete a period of sexual maturation of at least 30 hours before they can respond to the sex pheromone and mate. Without mating, the maximal lifespan of males was approximately five days and 50% of males lived only up to 4.4 days (25.0 ± 0.5oC). Therefore, we estimate that most P. citri males have less than three days to find a receptive female and mate with her. However, since P. citri males only fly within a period of approximately four hours after sunrise, the total effective time available for mate location by flight is actually only less than 12 hours.
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