Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder

The Western flower thrips (WFT), Frankliniella occidentalis, is an important pest of many crops worldwide and a vector of viral pathogens. Studying the orientation and approach of flying WFT toward attractive targets can enhance the efficacy of monitoring this pest. Monitoring WFT in open fields using attractive colored traps mounted on a wind vane indicated that most trapped thrips were on the leeward of the traps. In this study, we determined the distribution of trapped WFT on cylindrical yellow traps under controlled conditions in a wind tunnel (24 ± 1 °C, 70 ± 4% RH, airflow speeds 0.19 m sec− 1). In each replicate, we released 150–250 WFT females, either upwind or downwind of the cylindrical yellow sticky trap. Each replicate lasted six hours. Overall, 79%±14 of the released WFT females flew actively and 59%±15 of those that flew were trapped. The vast majority of the thrips were trapped on leeward of the cylindrical yellow traps. Of the WFT females released downwind of the trap, 93%±3 (N = 6) were trapped on the leeward, while of those released upwind of the trap, 81%±8 (N = 7) were trapped on the leeward. A behavioral-biomechanical model simulating WFT flight towards the attractive yellow cylinders predicted that, as long as airflow speed is below the WFT flight speed, 71–84% of the WFT will be trapped on the leeward. The results of this study agree with the trapping distributions of WFT recorded in field studies. The results also suggest that, when airflow speed is below the WFT flight speed, most WFT approach visually attractive traps by actively flying upwind.

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Main Authors: Ben-Yakir, David, van Tol, Rob, Bovio, Marcella, Ribak, Gal
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/distribution-of-western-flower-thrips-trapped-on-a-yellow-cylinde
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6185152024-10-02 Ben-Yakir, David van Tol, Rob Bovio, Marcella Ribak, Gal Article/Letter to editor Journal of Insect Behavior 36 (2023) 4 ISSN: 0892-7553 Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder 2023 The Western flower thrips (WFT), Frankliniella occidentalis, is an important pest of many crops worldwide and a vector of viral pathogens. Studying the orientation and approach of flying WFT toward attractive targets can enhance the efficacy of monitoring this pest. Monitoring WFT in open fields using attractive colored traps mounted on a wind vane indicated that most trapped thrips were on the leeward of the traps. In this study, we determined the distribution of trapped WFT on cylindrical yellow traps under controlled conditions in a wind tunnel (24 ± 1 °C, 70 ± 4% RH, airflow speeds 0.19 m sec− 1). In each replicate, we released 150–250 WFT females, either upwind or downwind of the cylindrical yellow sticky trap. Each replicate lasted six hours. Overall, 79%±14 of the released WFT females flew actively and 59%±15 of those that flew were trapped. The vast majority of the thrips were trapped on leeward of the cylindrical yellow traps. Of the WFT females released downwind of the trap, 93%±3 (N = 6) were trapped on the leeward, while of those released upwind of the trap, 81%±8 (N = 7) were trapped on the leeward. A behavioral-biomechanical model simulating WFT flight towards the attractive yellow cylinders predicted that, as long as airflow speed is below the WFT flight speed, 71–84% of the WFT will be trapped on the leeward. The results of this study agree with the trapping distributions of WFT recorded in field studies. The results also suggest that, when airflow speed is below the WFT flight speed, most WFT approach visually attractive traps by actively flying upwind. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/distribution-of-western-flower-thrips-trapped-on-a-yellow-cylinde 10.1007/s10905-023-09838-3 https://edepot.wur.nl/637441 Life Science 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 Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Ben-Yakir, David
van Tol, Rob
Bovio, Marcella
Ribak, Gal
Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder
description The Western flower thrips (WFT), Frankliniella occidentalis, is an important pest of many crops worldwide and a vector of viral pathogens. Studying the orientation and approach of flying WFT toward attractive targets can enhance the efficacy of monitoring this pest. Monitoring WFT in open fields using attractive colored traps mounted on a wind vane indicated that most trapped thrips were on the leeward of the traps. In this study, we determined the distribution of trapped WFT on cylindrical yellow traps under controlled conditions in a wind tunnel (24 ± 1 °C, 70 ± 4% RH, airflow speeds 0.19 m sec− 1). In each replicate, we released 150–250 WFT females, either upwind or downwind of the cylindrical yellow sticky trap. Each replicate lasted six hours. Overall, 79%±14 of the released WFT females flew actively and 59%±15 of those that flew were trapped. The vast majority of the thrips were trapped on leeward of the cylindrical yellow traps. Of the WFT females released downwind of the trap, 93%±3 (N = 6) were trapped on the leeward, while of those released upwind of the trap, 81%±8 (N = 7) were trapped on the leeward. A behavioral-biomechanical model simulating WFT flight towards the attractive yellow cylinders predicted that, as long as airflow speed is below the WFT flight speed, 71–84% of the WFT will be trapped on the leeward. The results of this study agree with the trapping distributions of WFT recorded in field studies. The results also suggest that, when airflow speed is below the WFT flight speed, most WFT approach visually attractive traps by actively flying upwind.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Life Science
author Ben-Yakir, David
van Tol, Rob
Bovio, Marcella
Ribak, Gal
author_facet Ben-Yakir, David
van Tol, Rob
Bovio, Marcella
Ribak, Gal
author_sort Ben-Yakir, David
title Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder
title_short Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder
title_full Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder
title_fullStr Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of Western Flower Thrips Trapped on a Yellow Cylinder
title_sort distribution of western flower thrips trapped on a yellow cylinder
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/distribution-of-western-flower-thrips-trapped-on-a-yellow-cylinde
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