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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas J. Mills is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas J. Mills.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 1997

The influence of hosts, temperature and food sources on the longevity of Trichogramma platneri

S. J. McDougall; Nicholas J. Mills

Feeding experiments were conducted with Trichogramma platneri Nagarkatti (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) reared from the Angoumois grain moth, Sitotroga cerealella (Oliver) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae). T. platneri provisioned with host eggs do not live any longer than T. platneri without host eggs. Longevity of T. platneri is inversely related to temperature declining from 53 days at 10 °C to 3 days at 35 °C for honey‐fed parasitoids and from 9 days at 10 °C to 1 day at 35 °C for unfed parasitoids. Sugar sources are necessary to prolong longevity of T. platneri, but a source of amino acid did not promote longevity. Honey solutions greater than 10%, and 43% fructose and sucrose solutions increased longevity 10–13 fold to 15–20 days in comparison to water when fed daily to T. platneri. Parasitoids fed only at the onset of the trial had greater longevity than unfed parasitoids but had a shorter longevity than parasitoids fed daily, due to the evaporation of the sugar solutions and consumption of the honey. Aphid honeydew is a suitable field‐available sugar source supporting longevity up to 10 days, but is not as good as other sugar sources. Stabilizing additives did not reduce evaporation of a dilute sugar solution nor prolong longevity of T. platneri. Simulating a daily dew fall by misting vials, to redissolve the crystallized food residues left after providing food at the onset of the trial, failed to increase parasitoid longevity.


Ecological Entomology | 1982

Satiation and the functional response: a test of a new model

Nicholas J. Mills

Abstract. 1. A model of the functional response to prey density is derived to include the reduction in time available for search, Ts, resulting from predator satiation.


Environmental Entomology | 2002

Effect of Bt-toxin (Cry1Ac) in Transgenic Cotton on the Adult Longevity of Four Heteropteran Predators

Sergine Ponsard; A. P. Gutierrez; Nicholas J. Mills

Abstract The management of agroecosystems affects intricately linked assemblages of organisms, and nontarget species are not necessarily unimpacted. We examined the effect of Bt-cotton and of lepidopteran prey (Spodoptera exigua Hübner) that had ingested it on the adult survivorship of four important heteropteran predators of cotton pests. Longevity significantly decreased for Orius tristicolor White and Geocoris punctipes Say (by 28 and 27% of the control value, respectively), whereas no effect was found for Nabis sp. and Zelus renardii Kolenati. This finding contrasts with the results of previous studies in which Orius spp. and G. punctipes were either fed only plant material or nonlepidopteran prey. S. exigua is a lepidopteran with low susceptibility to the Bt toxin expressed in cotton and therefore exemplifies the possible effect on predators of lepidopteran pests that would become resistant to Bt. The importance of Bt toxin type, the difference between plants and prey and between different prey species as routes of ingestion of Bt toxins, and the need for studies assessing the population and ecosystem-level effects of Bt cotton are discussed.


Pest Management Science | 2009

Tree fruit IPM programs in the western United States: the challenge of enhancing biological control through intensive management.

Vincent P. Jones; Thomas R. Unruh; David R. Horton; Nicholas J. Mills; Jay F. Brunner; Elizabeth H. Beers; Peter W. Shearer

The seminal work of Stern and his coauthors on integrated control has had a profound and long-lasting effect on the development of IPM programs in western orchard systems. Management systems based solely on pesticides have proven to be unstable, and the success of IPM systems in western orchards has been driven by conservation of natural enemies to control secondary pests, combined with pesticides and mating disruption to suppress the key lepidopteran pests. However, the legislatively mandated changes in pesticide use patterns prompted by the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996 have resulted in an increased instability of pest populations in orchards because of natural enemy destruction. The management system changes have made it necessary to focus efforts on enhancing biological control not only of secondary pests but also of primary lepidopteran pests to help augment new pesticides and mating disruption tactics. The new management programs envisioned will be information extensive as well as time sensitive and will require redesign of educational and outreach programs to be successful. The developing programs will continue to use the core principles of Stern and his co-authors, but go beyond them to incorporate changes in society, technology and information transfer, as needed.


Animal Behaviour | 2003

Clutch size decisions of a gregarious parasitoid under laboratory and field conditions

T. Martijn Bezemer; Nicholas J. Mills

Under field conditions, insect parasitoids probably experience lower rates of host encounter and life expectancy than under optimal conditions in laboratory studies. We examined the clutch size response of Mastrus ridibundus, a gregarious idiobiont parasitoid of codling moth, Cydia pomonella, cocoons, to variation in both host encounter rate and life expectancy as possible explanatory variables in a comparison of brood size in the field and laboratory. Under laboratory conditions, mean clutch size (number of eggs laid) declined from 5.8 to 3.4 as host encounter rate increased from one to eight cocoons per day. In contrast, when we reduced life expectancy by withholding honey as a food source, females did not adjust clutch size. Mean brood size (number of progeny surviving to pupation) of females foraging in walnut orchards (3.9) was significantly greater than that under laboratory conditions with excess hosts (3.1). Brood size also increased with host size in the field, but not under laboratory conditions. Brood size fitness curves were derived using both host-finding ability in the field and lifetime fecundity under laboratory conditions as indices of female fitness. Host-finding ability increased exponentially with body size, generating an estimated Lack brood size of 4.3, but lifetime fecundity increased linearly with body size, giving a Lack brood size estimate of 5.5. Under field conditions, female M. ridibundus produced brood sizes that closely approximated the Lack brood size estimated from host-finding ability, but that were significantly smaller than that estimated from lifetime fecundity. These observations suggest that, in contrast to lifetime fecundity measures from the laboratory, host-finding ability in the field provides a more accurate estimate of lifetime reproductive success for parasitoids with a low expectation of future reproduction.


Ecological Entomology | 1981

Some aspects of the rate of increase of a coccinellid

Nicholas J. Mills

Abstract. 1. Fecundity, growth and development were determined at a range of feeding levels and temperatures and compared with the component models for the predator rate of increase.


Ecological Entomology | 2005

Influence of adult nutrition on the relationship between body size and reproductive parameters in a parasitoid wasp

T. Martijn Bezemer; Jeffrey A. Harvey; Nicholas J. Mills

Abstract.  1. An important constraint upon life‐history evolution in parasitoids is the limit imposed by body size on allocation of limited metabolic resources to different fitness‐related physiological functions such as reproduction and survival.


Ecological Entomology | 2004

Ratio dependence in the functional response of insect parasitoids: evidence from Trichogramma minutum foraging for eggs in small host patches

Nicholas J. Mills; I. Lacan

Abstract.  1. Despite considerable recent debate on the suitability of ratio dependence as a more general form for the functional response in consumer–victim relationships, there have been few detailed studies to experimentally determine the response of insect parasitoids to host and parasitoid density at a local scale.


Ecological Entomology | 2000

The relationship between egg load and fecundity among Trichogramma parasitoids

Nicholas J. Mills; U. Kuhlmann

1. The relationships between parasitoid egg load, size, and age (3–72 h) for Trichogramma minutum, T. platneri, and T. pretiosum, reared from two factitious hosts, Ephestia kuehniella and Sitotroga cerealella, were evaluated to test the hypothesis that 24‐h egg load can be used to estimate the fecundity of Trichogramma parasitoids.


Biological Invasions | 2011

Predicting the potential invasive range of light brown apple moth (Epiphyas postvittana) using biologically informed and correlative species distribution models

Jeffrey D. Lozier; Nicholas J. Mills

The light brown apple moth (Epiphyas postvittana) is a highly polyphagous species that has invaded several geographic regions across the globe and has stimulated substantial concern over possible impacts for agriculture in the US. We aimed to predict the potential geographic range of E. postvittana to better understand the threat of this species in the US and globally. We used the mechanistic simulation modelling method CLIMEX and the correlative niche modelling method Maxent to predict the geographic distribution of E. postvittana in its native range and globally and tested model projections using known invasion data. Different predictor variable data sets and threshold dependent and independent measures of environmental suitability were considered in model evaluation. Models accurately predicted known invasive localities of E. postvittana across the globe. Overall predictions of environmental suitability were largely congruent across models, although there were some notable differences. Ephiphyas postvittana clearly has the potential to establish in many regions of the globe, although some previous analyses of the potential distribution of this species appear overly pessimistic. Additional studies of the biology of this species in invaded areas, including interactions with natural enemies and the capacity to adapt to novel climatic conditions, are ultimately needed to more fully understand its potential economic and environmental impacts.

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Kent M. Daane

University of California

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Carolyn Pickel

University of California

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David R. Horton

Agricultural Research Service

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