Beneficial effect of supplementing an artificial diet for Amblyseius swirskii with Hermetia illucens haemolymph
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Titre | Beneficial effect of supplementing an artificial diet for Amblyseius swirskii with Hermetia illucens haemolymph |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2015 |
Auteurs | Nguyen D.T, Bouguet V., Spranghers T., Vangansbeke D., De Clercq P. |
Journal | JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY |
Volume | 139 |
Pagination | 342-351 |
Date Published | JUN |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 0931-2048 |
Mots-clés | Amblyseius swirskii, artificial diet, Hermetia illucens, life table, mass rearing, Phytoseiidae |
Résumé | Artificial diets have been developed to sustain the mass rearing of a wide range of arthropod natural enemies, with varying success. In some cases, such diets can be optimized using insect-derived materials, such as haemolymph. In this study, we examined the effect of supplementing haemolymph of the black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens, to a basic artificial diet for the phytoseiid mite Amblyseius swirskii. The survival, development and reproduction of the predatory mite were assessed when fed on artificial diets composed of honey, sucrose, tryptone, yeast extract and egg yolk, supplemented with 5%, 10%, or 20% of H.illucens pre-pupal haemolymph. Developmental time from larva to adult was shorter for males and females offered artificial diets supplemented with 20% haemolymph vs. the basic diet. The oviposition rate and total fecundity of females reared on the basic diet were substantially lower than those of females supplied with the enriched diets. The intrinsic rate of increase was highest on the diet containing 20% haemolymph, followed by those containing 10% and 5% haemolymph. In a subsequent diet-switching experiment, mites fed on the basic diet in their juvenile stages were switched upon adulthood to diet enriched with different concentrations of H.illucens haemolymph. The females that were fed with the enriched diets from the adult stage on had higher oviposition rates and fecundities than those maintained on the basic diet, but their reproductive parameters were not significantly affected by the concentration of the haemolymph in the artificial diet. In conclusion, supplementing artificial diets with black soldier fly haemolymph significantly improved their nutritional value for A.swirskii. Our findings indicate the potential of using H.illucens as a cheap source for haemolymph in artificial diets, as the fly can be cost-effectively produced at a large scale on organic waste materials. |
DOI | 10.1111/jen.12188 |