Native predators impact BMSB more than expected

A jumping spider on the prowl for prey in vegetable crops at Redbud Farm, Inwood, WV. Photo: Rob Morrison
Tracy Leskey from the USDA-ARS Appalachian Fruit Research Station, Clarissa Mathews from Shepherd University, and I evaluated 25 native generalist natural enemy species collected from the field as potential predators of BMSB egg masses in the laboratory. More than 450 individual predators were tested, including immature and adult life stages, and they were given the opportunity to feed on BMSB egg masses. The eggs were photographed before and after predator exposure in order to evaluate and characterize damage inflicted by specific predator species. The aim was to link egg damage to specific groups or guilds of predators.
In the past several years, there have been large sentinel egg mass deployments in the U.S. A sentinel egg mass is one where researchers place the eggs on a notecard, and put it in a tree to understand predation and parasitism in the field. These are usually left out for 48 hours, and researchers then retrieve them at the end of the period. However, as researchers have been retrieving them, they have noticed that a great many notecards have egg masses that are missing. In the past, this has been assumed to be from wind, abrasion by leaves rustling against each other, or from rainfall.
One of the feeding syndromes was “complete chewing,” where the egg mass was either partially or fully consumed so that there was no trace of it, which could make researchers assume that the egg mass was missing, thereby deflating estimates of biological control. However, the most common and frequent predation was by katydids, and these are complete chewers, which strongly suggests that an alternative explanation for these missing egg masses may be from the good work our native predators are doing.
In addition to katydids, the most frequent and voracious predators of BMSB stink bug eggs included crickets, ground beetles, jumping spiders, and earwigs. While orthopterans such as katydids and crickets are typically thought to primarily eat plants, many are omnivorous and will take advantage of protein-rich resources such as stink bug eggs in crops. We found that these same native predators were also present in vegetable and fruit agroecosystems in the mid-Atlantic. Importantly, we found that lady beetles are not an important source of mortality for BMSB eggs. In total, seven lady beetle species were tested and neither adults nor larvae appreciably consumed any eggs.
Predators were also observed using videography, and some interesting behaviors emerged that further suggest native predators may not be getting as much credit as they deserve in the biological control of BMSB. For example, jumping spiders would often pick up an egg mass, roam around a petri dish with it, and then finally sink their chelicerae into the eggs to feed. This may indicate that other predators may actually be physically removing eggs and taking them elsewhere before feeding on them.
— Rob Morrison, USDA-ARS Appalachian Fruit Research Station
Source: Entomological Society of America