1985
DOI: 10.1051/agro:19850505
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Les besoins trophiques et thermiques des larves de la coccinelle Harmonia axyridis Pallas

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Cited by 38 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…However, H. axyridis begins to develop between ~8°C (Soares et al 2003) and~11°C (LaMana &. Development is most rapid at ~30°C (Schanderl et al 1985). Likewise, females are mated more quickly at 30°C than at cooler temperatures (Stathas et al 2001).…”
Section: Establishmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, H. axyridis begins to develop between ~8°C (Soares et al 2003) and~11°C (LaMana &. Development is most rapid at ~30°C (Schanderl et al 1985). Likewise, females are mated more quickly at 30°C than at cooler temperatures (Stathas et al 2001).…”
Section: Establishmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a number of papers it is mentioned that H. axyridis is a large sized polyphagous predator and has a great reproductive capacity in comparison with other ladybird beetles 2. In some papers, not only the polyphagous habit is mentioned, but also prey species are listed indicating a wide prey range (Vasil'ev 1963;Hodek 1973;Iablokoff-Khnzorian 1982;Schanderl et al 1985;McClure 1987) 3. In one paper, the need to explicitly study non-target effects because of the polyphagous habit of H. axyridis is mentioned (Coderre et al 1995).…”
Section: Environmental Risk Assessment For H Axyridis Based On Pre-1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The type of climate also restricts temperature fluctuations throughout the year (Azevedo 2005). The milder temperatures occurring over the spring and the summer seasons in the Azores are very close to the thermal optimum for foraging and breeding activities of H. axyridis (Schanderl et al 1985) and thus, the Azorean temperatures seem not to be a limiting factor of its invasiveness. Indeed Poutsma et al (2007), using the CLIMEX programme (v2), predicted that establishment and spread seem likely in many temperate regions across the world including a large part of temperate and Mediterranean Europe, North and South America, Australia and New Zealand.…”
Section: Azores the First Failure Of H Axyridis?mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…This species preys on more than 30 different aphid species and so was considered as a suitable candidate for efficient biological control against many pests including: aphids (see Lucas et al 2007a;Tedders and Schaefer 1994;Hodek and Honȇk 1996), Tetranychidae (Lucas et al 1997(Lucas et al , 2002, Psyllidae (Fye 1981;Michaud 2001Michaud , 2002Michaud , 2004, Coccoidea (McClure 1986), Chrysomelidae , Curculionidae (Kalaskar and Evans 2001;Stuart et al 2002) and Lepidoptera (Koch et al , 2005Musser and Shelton 2003a). Its large body size, high voracity and predation efficiency (Schanderl et al 1985;Osawa 2000;Soares et al 2001;Labrie et al 2006) as well as its good colonization efficiency (Osawa 2000; were considered good characteristics to provide successful biological control of many pests. This coccinellid seems to be an effective biological control agent; upon review of 27 studies of H. axyridis as a biocontrol agent (Lucas et al 2007a), 17 studies showed effective biological control of 16 different pest species by this coccinellid.…”
Section: Harmonia Axyridis: Where and When?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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