Populations of the phorid fly Megaselia halterata on an experimental mushroom unit over four years
- 1 July 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Applied Biology
- Vol. 92 (2) , 159-171
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7348.1979.tb03861.x
Abstract
SUMMARY: Populations of phorid flies on an experimental mushroom unit were sampled simultaneously in both spawn‐running and mushroom cropping‐houses by sticky traps. Comparison between these populations showed that each reached a maximum about August and that the rate of increase, as measured by the ratio between them, varied from 22 × (at the beginning of February and in mid‐August to 115 × (at the beginning of June and the end of December). Population growth within a crop was assessed from the peaks plotted from weekly catches. Three such peaks could be seen, starting from initial numbers which were high, on average, at casing but with little increase after the seventh week of cropping. However, population growth within crops, found by pooling data for different seasons, showed logistic increases though slopes varied from low, for May to June‐spawned crops, to high for October spawning. Wide variations occurred in the proportion of the total flies represented in the initial catches in the first wk after casing.Partial regressions were examined for the numbers caught in cropping‐houses on those taken in spawn‐running rooms throughout the year. Catches for crops spawned during June to September gave lower slopes for high cropping‐house populations. Spawn‐running room catches showed a linear relation with outdoor 9.00 a.m. B.S.T. temperature and cropping‐house numbers a logistic relation, a better fit obtaining with temperatures at spawning rather than 5 wk later during cropping. Catches during spawn‐running were correlated with those during subsequent cropping and these with catches made during the previous crop on the unit, irrespective of site. Since it was bimodal, rate of increase between spawn‐running and cropping‐houses did not correlate with outdoor temperature but revealed some very high catches in winter. Many flies were trapped in the cropping‐houses early in the year when flies were absent from spawn‐running rooms. Evidence for movements within farms is discussed, especially with respect to overwintering of the phorid, which validates routine trapping of both populations.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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