Stink Bugs: Friend or Foe

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Stink bugs are fierce prehistoric looking bugs. Some are
indeed quite fierce and others simply stink more than they bite! In many parts of the
world including their native range of China, Japan, Korea and Taiwan the brown
marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys)
is considered an agricultural pest. Yet other genera of stink bugs,
specifically the Podisus nigrispinus
(Dallas), are considered an important biological control agent for other insect
pests in the cotton, soybean, tomato, corn, and kale fields.

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The predatory Podisus
nigrispinus
(Dallas) feeds primarily on insect larvae and was originally
reared and released in Brazil to control lepidopterous larvae, which were
defoliating Eucalyptus trees.

Noting their beneficial use as an agricultural control
mechanism, researchers for the Entomological Society of America have begun to
explore mass rearing of the P.
nigrispinus
in the laboratory.   A
new study appearing in Annals of the Entomological Society of America called “Effect of
Egg Rearing Temperature and Storage Time on the Biological Characteristics of
the Predatory Stink Bug Podisus
nigrispinus
(Hemiptera: Pentatomidae)”
highlights their results
in an effort to help companies that rear these beneficial insects and the
growers who use them in the field. This is the first study to examine the
storage technique for the predator P.
nigrispinus
to improve its mass rearing in laboratory conditions without
compromising the quality of insects produced.

“Our goal was to evaluate the effect of low
temperatures on the biological characteristics of P. nigrispinus, with the aim of optimizing mass-rearing programs
for this potential biological control agent,” the authors wrote. “The
successful storage of eggs at a low temperature is important for the use of
natural enemies in pest control programs, as it allows greater flexibility in
the mass-rearing process. It also increases the availability of insects for
release in the field at the earliest opportunity.”

The researchers identifies 15 degrees Celsius as the
optimum storage temperature for P.
nigrispinus
eggs, noting that the eggs could be stored for up to 17 days
without significantly affecting most of the biological characteristics.

“Our results suggest that low temperatures can be
used to store eggs for mass rearing of this potential biological control
agent,” the authors write. “This would allow P. nigrispinus to be used in augmentative releases that could be
coordinated with pest outbreaks in the field.”

Read more at the Entomological Society of America.

Image via Juliana
Simonato
.


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