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Seasonal variation in the migration strategies of the green lacewing Chrysoperla carnea species complex
Author(s) -
CHAPMAN JASON W.,
REYNOLDS DON R.,
BROOKS STEPHEN J.,
SMITH ALAN D.,
WOIWOD IAN P.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2311.2006.00797.x
Subject(s) - biology , chrysoperla carnea , aphid , harmonia axyridis , ecology , predation , chrysopidae , neuroptera , altitude (triangle) , population , insect , coccinellidae , predator , botany , geometry , mathematics , demography , sociology
Abstract 1. Insect migration strategies are generally poorly understood due to the propensity for high‐altitude flight of many insect species, and the technical difficulties associated with observing these movements. While some progress has been made in the study of the migration of important insect pests, the migration strategies of insect natural enemies are often unknown. 2. Suction trapping, radar monitoring, and high‐altitude aerial netting were used to characterise the seasonal migrations in the U.K. of an assemblage of aphid predators: three green lacewings in the Chrysoperla carnea species complex. 3. Chrysoperla carnea sens. str . was found to be very abundant at high altitudes during their summer migration, and some individuals were capable of migrating distances of ≈ 300 km during their pre‐ovipositional period. In contrast, high‐altitude flights were absent in the autumn migration period, probably due to a behavioural adaptation that increases the probability that migrants will encounter their over‐wintering sites. The other two species in the complex, C. lucasina and C. pallida , were much rarer, making up ≈ 3% of the total airborne populations throughout the study period. 4. The summer migration of C. carnea sens. str . was not directly temporally associated with the summer migration of its cereal aphid prey, but lagged behind by about 4 weeks. There was also no evidence of spatial association between aphid and lacewing populations. 5. The results show that to understand the population ecology of highly mobile insect species, it is necessary to characterise fully all aspects of their migration behaviour, including the role of high‐altitude flights.