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Flight directionality of T ribolium castaneum soon after take‐off under glasshouse and field conditions
Author(s) -
Rafter M.A.,
Ridley A.W.,
Daglish G.J.,
Burrill P.R.,
Walter G.H.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
entomologia experimentalis et applicata
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.765
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1570-7458
pISSN - 0013-8703
DOI - 10.1111/eea.12320
Subject(s) - biology , greenhouse , wind speed , insect flight , pest analysis , red flour beetle , directionality , botany , atmospheric sciences , meteorology , physics , insect , wing , genetics , thermodynamics
Flight directionality of the rust‐red flour beetle, T ribolium castaneum ( H erbst) ( C oleoptera: T enebrionidae), was investigated under glasshouse and field conditions using sticky traps placed around dense experimental infestations of T . castaneum derived from field‐collected samples. Although beetles of this species are known to fly quite readily, information on flight of beetles away from grain resources is limited. Under still glasshouse conditions, T . castaneum does not demonstrate strong horizontal or vertical trajectories in their initial flight behaviour. Flight was significantly directional in half of the replicates, but trapped beetles were only weakly concentrated around the mean direction of flight. In the field, by contrast, emigration of T . castaneum was strongly directional soon after flight initiation. The mean vector lengths were generally >0.5 which indicates that trapped beetles were strongly concentrated around the calculated mean flight direction. A circular‐circular regression of mean flight vs. mean downwind direction suggested that flight direction was generally correlated with downwind direction. The mean height at which T . castaneum individuals initially flew was 115.4 ± 7.0 cm, with 58.3% of beetles caught no more than 1 m above the ground. The height at which beetles were trapped did not correlate with wind speed at the time of sampling, but the data do indicate that wind speed significantly affected T . castaneum flight initiation, because no beetles (or very few; no more than three) were trapped in the field when the mean wind speed was above 3 m s −1 . This study thus demonstrates that wind speed and direction are both important aspects of flight behaviour of T . castaneum , and therefore of the spatio‐temporal dynamics of this species.