Six designs were tried out to evaluate the efficiency of each regarding feeding the predatory mite, Amblyseius swirskii Athias-Henriot (Acari: Phytoseiidae), on a liquid artificial diet, considering four criteria: the duration of the liquid-phase of the diet, the percentage of the mites that congregate to feed on the diet, the percentage of the mites that adhere to the diet, and the duration of sucking the diet up. The most efficient design was based on providing the mites with a diet-saturated piece of thread connected to a little of the diet. For this, the piece of thread was passed through a 10 ml plastic pot containing a little of the diet. As soon as the piece of thread turns solid, it is pulled to be replaced with the next diet-saturated piece. By applying that design to feed the mites on a diet composed of skim milk, honey, yolk, baker's yeast, and amino acid solution 10% at a volume ratio of 100:1:1:20:1, respectively, the diet that saturated the piece of thread remained in the liquid phase for an average of three hours; then, it turned solid. The ability of the diet located in the pot, to saturate more thread, lasted for five hours; then, it coagulated. The percentage of the mites that congregated to feed on the diet, in 30 minutes, amounted to an average of 83.33%. No individual stuck to the diet-saturated thread within the liquid-phase span. Sucking the diet continued for an average of 62.33 minutes.
The population densities of the predatory mite Amblyseius swirskii Athias-Henriot (Acari: Phytoseiidae) were observed in a pesticide-free cotton field in Egypt. The highest population density of was noted in September, whereas the lowest was noted in June. The plant's central section indicated the maximum population density, whereas the plant's top section indicated the lowest population density. The population density of mites found on the undersides of the leaves was significantly higher than that of mites found on the upper sides of the leaves. The bases and pleats of the undersides of the leaves harboured the mite majority. Neither Lambda cyhalothrin (5%) E.C. nor Chlorpyrifos methyl (48%) E.C. had a significant effect on the mite numbers. A defoliant was sprayed in the pesticide-free area. A week later, the recently fallen leaves had the greatest mite population density. A few recently fallen leaves were collected from an area treated with both defoliant and the two pesticides. When they were stacked in a glass jar covered with opaque fabric apart from the opening, in a continuously lit laboratory, the majority of the mites congregated on the topmost leaves.
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