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Laboratory experiments compared the nutritive value of various pollen sources for the development of Coleomegilla maculata DeGeer under conditions of continuous water availability and simulated drought. When water was continuously available, larval survival was not different from 100% on diets of frozen eggs of Ephestia kuehniella Zeller, corn pollen, sorghum pollen, or pulverized bee pollen, whereas survival of larvae was significantly reduced on the latter three diets in the simulated drought treatment. Pollen of cultivated sunflower, Helianthus annus L., proved fatal to both larvae and adults; its surface structure caused clumping and accumulation on the insect cuticle that led to death from exhaustion/desiccation in Petri dishes. The Ephestia egg diet yielded shorter developmental times and heavier adult weights than any pollen diet in both treatments. The drought treatment increased developmental time on all diets with significant treatment-diet and treatment-gender interactions. Drought reduced the adult weight of females on the sorghum pollen diet, and that of both sexes on the bee pollen diet, with a significant treatment-diet interaction. Initial water content was highest in corn pollen (36.8 %), followed by Ephestia eggs (29.2 %), sorghum pollen (25.3 %), sunflower pollen (8.7 %), and bee pollen (4.6 %), but did not appear correlated with C. maculata larval survival on pollen sources under drought conditions. Reproductive adult females that received corn or sorghum pollen as a supplement to Ephestia eggs did not differ in fecundity or fertility from those fed only Ephestia eggs.
See more of Ten-Minute Papers, Section Ca. Biological Control, Cb. Apiculture and Social Insects, Cd. Behavior and Ecology, Cf. Quantitative Ecology
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