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Featured researches published by J.P. Michaud.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2007

Dietary complementation across life stages in the polyphagous lady beetle Coleomegilla maculata

J.P. Michaud; J.L. Jyoti

We investigated the life history consequences of changes in diet between larval and adult life stages in the polyphagous lady beetle Coleomegilla maculata DeGeer (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae). Beetles were reared on three larval diets: greenbug, Schizaphis graminum Rondani (Homoptera: Aphididae), eggs of the flour moth, Ephestia kuehniella Zeller (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), and bee pollen. The reproductive performance of females was then evaluated on an adult diet of either greenbug or moth eggs. Moth eggs appeared to be the most suitable diet for larvae, yielding the largest adults, and pollen the least suitable, resulting in the smallest adults and greatly extended developmental time. Pollen‐reared beetles tended to have lower fecundity and fertility than those reared on animal protein, regardless of adult diet. Female fitness was generally increased by a change in diet upon emergence to the alternative source of animal protein, suggesting that dietary complementation occurred across life stages. Among females reared on greenbug, a change of diet to moth eggs reduced the period required for production of 12 clutches and increased egg fertility compared to continued feeding on greenbug. Among females reared on moth eggs, a change of diet to greenbug increased fecundity compared to continued feeding on moth eggs. Among females fed an adult diet of greenbug, those fed moth eggs as larvae had faster production of 12 clutches and higher fecundity. We discuss these novel results in the context of coccinellid life history and ecology and their potential implications for other insects that are predatory as both larvae and adults.


Ecological Entomology | 2008

A comparative study of cannibalism and predation in seven species of flour beetle

Taofic Alabi; J.P. Michaud; Ludovic Arnaud; Eric Haubruge

Abstract 1. The present study quantified egg and pupal cannibalism, and interspecific predation on eggs and pupae, by larvae and adults of seven species of flour beetle (Tribolium spp.) under laboratory conditions: T. anaphe, T. brevicornis, T. castaneum, T. confusum, T. destructor, T. freemani, and T. madens.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2005

Comparative Biology of a Novel Strain of Russian Wheat Aphid (Homoptera: Aphididae) on Three Wheat Cultivars

J. L. Jyoti; J.P. Michaud

Abstract In spring 2003, several outbreaks of the Russian wheat aphid, Diuraphis noxia (Mordvilko), were reported in fields of supposedly resistant wheat cultivars (‘Stanton’, ‘Halt’, and ‘Prairie Red’) in eastern Colorado. We conducted two laboratory experiments to compare the biological performance of this new biotype 2 (B2) to that of two D. noxia collections of biotype 1 (B1) from western Kansas by using three wheat cultivars as host plants: ‘Trego’, a susceptible cultivar, and Stanton and Halt, two cultivars with different genetic sources of resistance. Survival of solitary nymphs from first instar to adult for the two clones of B1 on Trego was 96 and 90%, respectively, compared with 67 and 43% on Stanton, and 65 and 57% on Halt. In contrast, B2 had 60% survival on Trego, 43% survival on Halt, and 85% survival on Stanton. One clone of B1 required longer to mature on Halt compared with Trego or Stanton, but no other differences in developmental time among cultivars were significant. The standardized fecundity of solitary foundresses of the B1 clones was 19.6 and 20.1 nymphs on Trego, compared with 4.6 and 0.9 on Stanton, and 2.8 and 1.1 on Halt, respectively, over the same period. In contrast, fecundity of B2 was 21.1, 20.8, and 19.7 on Trego, Stanton, and Halt, respectively. When larger colonies developed on individual plants over longer periods, Trego supported the largest number of B1 aphids by experiment’s end, whereas Stanton and Halt yielded the largest numbers of B2. The order of overall plant damage was Trego > Stanton > Halt when infested with B1, with no significant differences for B2. Trego had more pronounced leaf rolling than other cultivars, independent of biotype. Collectively, the results suggest that D. noxia B2 from Colorado has evolved cross-virulence to both Dn4- and Dny-based resistance sources.


Pest Management Science | 2015

Non‐target effects of two sunflower seed treatments on Orius insidiosus (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae)

Pablo C. Gontijo; Valéria F. Moscardini; J.P. Michaud; Geraldo Andrade Carvalho

BACKGROUND Systemic insecticides used as seed treatments are generally considered to be safe for natural enemies. However, predatory insects may feed directly on plants or use plant products to supplement their diet. This study examined whether chlorantraniliprole or thiamethoxam might negatively impact Orius insidiosus (Say) (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae) when bugs utilize sunflowers grown from treated seed. RESULTS When eggs of O. insidiosus were laid in the stems of treated sunflower seedlings (two-leaf stage), thiamethoxam reduced egg viability and the longevity of females hatching from these eggs, whereas chlorantraniliprole reduced female survival. Thiamethoxam, but not chlorantraniliprole, reduced female fertility in six-leaf-stage plants. Nymphs exposed to thiamethoxam-treated seedlings had reduced survival, delayed development and reduced fecundity as adults, relative to other treatments, whereas chlorantraniliprole delayed oviposition. Nymphs exposed to six-leaf-stage plants did not differ from controls in either treatment. Adults exposed to treated plants expressed no significant differences among treatments for any parameter evaluated for either plant growth stage. CONCLUSION Thiamethoxam treatment on sunflower seeds caused lethal and sublethal effects on O. insidiosus, whereas chlorantraniliprole was not lethal to any life stage, although sublethal effects were evident. The nymphal stage was most susceptible, and insecticidal toxicity diminished with plant development.


Bulletin of Entomological Research | 2013

Sexual activity diminishes male virility in two Coccinella species: consequences for female fertility and progeny development

J.P. Michaud; Mahadev Bista; Geetanjali Mishra; Omkar Singh

Male contributions, both chemical and behavioural, can influence female sperm usage and reproductive success. To determine whether such male factors are subject to depletion in Coccinella septempunctata and Coccinella transversalis, we tested the effects of male mating history on male virility, as estimated by measures of mating behaviour, female reproductive success and progeny fitness, with parental age held constant. Overt measures of male mating effort (wriggling duration, number of shaking bouts and total copula duration) all diminished from virgin to 5×mated males and were mirrored by concurrent declines in female fecundity and fertility(measured over 20 days). Paternal effects were also observed which diminished as a function of mating history, suggesting that transgenerational signals of male origin are also subject to depletion. Progeny of virgin fathers had higher rates of survival(C. transversalis) and faster development (both species) than progeny of 5×mated fathers. Seminal fluid proteins are known to have allohormonal properties and can stimulate female fecundity and fertility in a number of insects, making them strong candidates for depletion as a function of mating activity. However, it is also possible that sperm limitation and/or reduced tactile stimulation of females by multiple-mated males may have contributed to some of the observed effects.


Environmental Entomology | 2005

Comparative Biology of Three Cereal Aphids on Tam 107 Wheat

Jawwad A. Qureshi; J.P. Michaud

Abstract Greenbug, Schizaphis graminum (Rodani); bird cherry-oat aphid, Rhopalosiphum padi L.; and Russian wheat aphid, Diuraphis noxia (Mordvilko), developed and reproduced successfully on TAM 107 wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) from 21.0 to 22.6°C when transferred to individual plants as single first instars. Both D. noxia “foundresses” and second-generation nymphs developed slower than those of S. graminum and R. padi. In all three species, nymphs developed faster in small colonies of siblings than did their foundress mother developing in solitude. However, when nymphs developed in solitude, only those of S. graminum developed faster than their mothers on the same plants, suggesting maternal induction of plant suitability. Isolated nymphs of D. noxia did not differ in developmental rate from their mothers on maternal plants, and those of R. padi developed more slowly, suggesting that effects of group feeding were responsible for the faster development of second-generation nymphs observed within growing colonies of these species. D. noxia cumulative foundress fecundity and daily reproductive rate were lower than those of S. graminum and R. padi. The estimated intrinsic rates of increase were S. graminum > R. padi > D. noxia. The preferred feeding location of S. graminum foundresses was the primary leaf, whereas for R. padi, it was the stem, and for D. noxia, it was the upper leaves, primarily the terminal leaf. Foundresses of R. padi were observed to change position on the plant from day to day more often than did those of S. graminum or D. noxia. R. padi colonies initiated from 10 first instars accumulated more biomass over a 10-d period than did those of S. graminum or D. noxia.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2013

Cryptic maternal effects in Hippodamia convergens vary with maternal age and body size

German Vargas; J.P. Michaud; James R. Nechols

Maternal effects can mold progeny phenotypes in various ways and may constitute ecological adaptations. By examining the effect of oviposition sequence on progeny produced by different size classes of female ladybird beetles (produced by controlling larval access to food), we show that maternal signals can change through adult life and alter the developmental programs of progeny, ostensibly to synchronize their life histories with predictable resource dynamics, thus maximizing maternal fitness. We also show that female body size, as determined by larval food supply, interacts with female age to influence progeny fitness. When fed ad libitum as adults, small females reared with limited food access laid fewer, smaller eggs than large females reared with ad libitum food access. Maternal body size interacted with oviposition sequence to influence progeny development, but the latter had greater impact. Eggs laid later by medium and large females hatched faster than those laid earlier, larvae fed longer in the fourth instar, their pupation period was shorter, total developmental time was reduced, and adults emerged with greater mass, most notably daughters. Oviposition sequence effects on progeny from small mothers were non‐significant for total developmental time and progeny mass. Only large mothers increased egg size over time and egg mass was not consistently correlated with developmental parameters, indicating that progeny phenotype was impacted by other, more cryptic, maternal signals. Such signals appear costly, as food limitation during development constrained not only fecundity and egg size but also maternal ability to manipulate progeny phenotype. The production of faster‐developing offspring that mature to larger sizes late in the oviposition cycle may be adaptive for exploitation of ephemeral aphid outbreaks with predictable dynamics of prey abundance and competition.


Bulletin of Entomological Research | 2012

Maternal effects shape dynamic trajectories of reproductive allocation in the ladybird Coleomegilla maculata

German Vargas; J.P. Michaud; James R. Nechols

We followed lifetime trajectories of reproductive allocation in Coleomegilla maculata females of three different size classes produced by rearing beetles on three different daily larval feeding regimes (30 min, 6 h or ad libitum access to eggs of Ephestia kuehniella). We hypothesized that small females would produce fewer and smaller eggs than larger females and that reproductive effort would decline with female age. Females were mated with a male from the same treatment and then isolated with ad libitum food for their entire adult lives. Egg size increased over time in all treatments; small females started off laying the smallest eggs, but increased egg size more rapidly than larger females, until all treatments converged on a similar egg size around the 20th day of oviposition. Large females realized a larger proportion of their fecundity early in life, but smaller females increased daily fecundity over time. Reproductive effort (egg mass/body mass) did not decline over 30 oviposition days; it remained constant in large females, but increased among small and medium females, suggesting gradual compensation for larval food deprivation. An increase in egg size with maternal age may be an adaptive strategy to maximize fitness on ephemeral patches of aphid prey, assuming females reproduce in a single aphid outbreak and that offspring produced later in the aphid cycle experience greater competition and risk of mortality compared to those produced earlier. We demonstrate for the first time in Coleoptera that dynamic changes in both egg size and number occur as a function of female age and illustrate that such changes are constrained by larval feeding histories via their effects on maternal body size.


Journal of Economic Entomology | 2015

Indigenous Aphid Predators Show High Levels of Preadaptation to a Novel Prey, Melanaphis sacchari (Hemiptera: Aphididae)

Felipe Colares; J.P. Michaud; Clint L. Bain; Jorge B. Torres

ABSTRACT The performance of four aphid predators, Hippodamia convergens Guerin-Meneville, Coleomegilla maculata DeGeer, Chrysopeda carnea Stephens and Orius insidiosus Say was compared on three prey species: Schizaphis graminum Rondani, Melanaphis sacchari (Zehntner), and Ephestia kuehniella Zeller eggs. Species predatory in both life stages (all except Ch, carnea) were reared on E. kuehniella eggs and switched to aphid prey for assessment of reproduction. Differences were greater between the E. kuehniella and aphid diets than between the two aphid species. Juvenile survival was high for all predators on all prey, except for O. insidiosus, which had survival on E. kuehniella > S. graminum > M. sacchari. The fastest development of Ch, carnea and O. insidiosus was obtained on E. kuehniella, whereas H. convergens developed fastest on S. graminum, and C. maculata did not differ among diets. S. graminum also yielded the largest H. convergens adults, whereas the largest adults of other predators were obtained on E. kuehniella. Female fecundity and egg viability were similarly high on both aphid diets for H. convergens and C. maculata, whereas, on E. kuehniella, 50% of the former entered reproductive diapause and the latter species had reduced fecundity. Reproductive success of Ch, carnea was S. graminum = M. sacchari > E. kuehniella, but it was similar among treatments for O. insidiosus, although female infertility ranged from 25 to 37.5%. We concluded that all the predators studied are preadapted to utilize sugarcane aphid as prey and have excellent potential to provide sustainable biological control of this newly invasive pest.


Journal of Insect Behavior | 2015

Cannibalism in Two Subtropical Lady Beetles (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) as a Function of Density, Life Stage, and Food Supply

Mohamed H. Bayoumy; J.P. Michaud

Cannibalism is an important factor influencing both immature survival and adult reproductive success in aphidophagous lady beetles. This study employed three series of laboratory experiments to characterize life stage-specific cannibalism responses of Coccinella undecimpunctata L. and Cydonia vicina nilotica Mulsant to 1) different conspecific densities, with and without prey, 2) other life stages, and 3) various densities of prey, Myzus persicae Sulzer. All larval instars of both species cannibalized more in the absence of prey than in its presence at all conspecific densities, but in general, cannibalism increased with conspecific density only in the absence of prey, and more strongly for third and fourth instar C. undecimpunctata than for their C. vicina nilotica counterparts. Adults contributed the most cannibalism of any life stage, and eggs were the most vulnerable. In addition to cannibalizing their own and earlier instars, second and third instar C. undecimpunctata sometimes cannibalized third and fourth instars, respectively, and fourth instars occasionally ate pupae. Larvae of C. vicina nilotica were only preyed upon by the same or later stages and pupae, by adults, not fourth instars. A relative vulnerability index was calculated for each life stage based on its net vulnerability to cannibalism by all life stages and plotting these indices revealed species-specific patterns of diminishing vulnerability to cannibalism as a function of life stage. Relative species vulnerability to cannibalism, considering all life stages, was higher for C. undecimpunctata (0.55) than for C. vicina nilotica (0.45). Finally, linear regression was used to characterize the change in propensity for cannibalism between same-instar larval pairs as a function of prey density, which enabled determination of a theoretical upper prey threshold for each larval instar, i.e., the prey density beyond which no cannibalism would be expected. In both species, regressions for third and fourth instars did not intercept the X-axis, suggesting that some cannibalism by these stages was inevitable within the range of prey densities tested.

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Jorge B. Torres

Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco

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Qingwen Zhang

China Agricultural University

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Xiaoxia Liu

China Agricultural University

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