Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control

The central theme of this PhD thesis is natural variation in the wing length of the predatory two-spot ladybird beetle, Adalia bipunctata. ‘Wingless’ individuals of this species occur occasionally. They possess truncated wing covers and flight wings and cannot fly, but the extent of the reduction is highly variable between individuals. At one hand, I take a multidisciplinary experimental approach to study the causes and consequences of this variation in an evolutionary context. Genetic and developmental studies show that it is regulated by several polymorphic genes, and results from gene-environment interactions affecting the growth of the larval wing discs. Studies on life-history traits and mating behaviour provide no evidence that winglessness is an adaptive trait in this ladybird. However, they reveal a function of the wing covers in survival and mating behaviour. On the other hand, I examine the use of wingless ladybirds in the biological control of aphids, since winged ladybirds are not effective when flying away soon after release. I show that wingless morphs have the potential to improve biocontrol efficacy. I then suggest that mass-rearing of this less fit morph could be improve by manipulation of the wing length. Altogether, this thesis interlinks the fields of fundamental (evolutionary) biology and applied biological control.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lommen, S.T.E.
Other Authors: Brakefield, P.M.
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:adalia, adalia bipunctata, biological control agents, coccinellidae, morphology, predatory insects, wings, morfologie, organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding, roofinsecten, vleugels,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-and-exploiting-natural-variation-in-the-wings-of-a-pred
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-4451542024-09-23 Lommen, S.T.E. Brakefield, P.M. de Jong, Peter Doctoral thesis Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control 2013 The central theme of this PhD thesis is natural variation in the wing length of the predatory two-spot ladybird beetle, Adalia bipunctata. ‘Wingless’ individuals of this species occur occasionally. They possess truncated wing covers and flight wings and cannot fly, but the extent of the reduction is highly variable between individuals. At one hand, I take a multidisciplinary experimental approach to study the causes and consequences of this variation in an evolutionary context. Genetic and developmental studies show that it is regulated by several polymorphic genes, and results from gene-environment interactions affecting the growth of the larval wing discs. Studies on life-history traits and mating behaviour provide no evidence that winglessness is an adaptive trait in this ladybird. However, they reveal a function of the wing covers in survival and mating behaviour. On the other hand, I examine the use of wingless ladybirds in the biological control of aphids, since winged ladybirds are not effective when flying away soon after release. I show that wingless morphs have the potential to improve biocontrol efficacy. I then suggest that mass-rearing of this less fit morph could be improve by manipulation of the wing length. Altogether, this thesis interlinks the fields of fundamental (evolutionary) biology and applied biological control. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-and-exploiting-natural-variation-in-the-wings-of-a-pred https://edepot.wur.nl/423125 adalia adalia bipunctata biological control agents coccinellidae morphology predatory insects wings adalia adalia bipunctata coccinellidae morfologie organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding roofinsecten vleugels Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic adalia
adalia bipunctata
biological control agents
coccinellidae
morphology
predatory insects
wings
adalia
adalia bipunctata
coccinellidae
morfologie
organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding
roofinsecten
vleugels
adalia
adalia bipunctata
biological control agents
coccinellidae
morphology
predatory insects
wings
adalia
adalia bipunctata
coccinellidae
morfologie
organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding
roofinsecten
vleugels
spellingShingle adalia
adalia bipunctata
biological control agents
coccinellidae
morphology
predatory insects
wings
adalia
adalia bipunctata
coccinellidae
morfologie
organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding
roofinsecten
vleugels
adalia
adalia bipunctata
biological control agents
coccinellidae
morphology
predatory insects
wings
adalia
adalia bipunctata
coccinellidae
morfologie
organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding
roofinsecten
vleugels
Lommen, S.T.E.
Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
description The central theme of this PhD thesis is natural variation in the wing length of the predatory two-spot ladybird beetle, Adalia bipunctata. ‘Wingless’ individuals of this species occur occasionally. They possess truncated wing covers and flight wings and cannot fly, but the extent of the reduction is highly variable between individuals. At one hand, I take a multidisciplinary experimental approach to study the causes and consequences of this variation in an evolutionary context. Genetic and developmental studies show that it is regulated by several polymorphic genes, and results from gene-environment interactions affecting the growth of the larval wing discs. Studies on life-history traits and mating behaviour provide no evidence that winglessness is an adaptive trait in this ladybird. However, they reveal a function of the wing covers in survival and mating behaviour. On the other hand, I examine the use of wingless ladybirds in the biological control of aphids, since winged ladybirds are not effective when flying away soon after release. I show that wingless morphs have the potential to improve biocontrol efficacy. I then suggest that mass-rearing of this less fit morph could be improve by manipulation of the wing length. Altogether, this thesis interlinks the fields of fundamental (evolutionary) biology and applied biological control.
author2 Brakefield, P.M.
author_facet Brakefield, P.M.
Lommen, S.T.E.
format Doctoral thesis
topic_facet adalia
adalia bipunctata
biological control agents
coccinellidae
morphology
predatory insects
wings
adalia
adalia bipunctata
coccinellidae
morfologie
organismen ingezet bij biologische bestrijding
roofinsecten
vleugels
author Lommen, S.T.E.
author_sort Lommen, S.T.E.
title Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
title_short Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
title_full Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
title_fullStr Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
title_full_unstemmed Exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
title_sort exploring and exploiting natural variation in the wings of a predatory ladybird beetle for biological control
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/exploring-and-exploiting-natural-variation-in-the-wings-of-a-pred
work_keys_str_mv AT lommenste exploringandexploitingnaturalvariationinthewingsofapredatoryladybirdbeetleforbiologicalcontrol
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