Imidacloprid is one of the most widely used insecticides in the world. It offers many benefits, such as ease and safety of application and decreased exposure to non-target organisms. Recently, imidacloprid has been used to treat thousands of elm trees as a preventative measure in Asian long-horned beetle eradication efforts in
Results/Conclusions
Our results indicated that elms treated with imidacloprid housed significantly more insects and arachnids. Additionally, spider mites (Tetranychus schoenei, McGregor) were the taxon driving this pattern. Applications of the insecticide result in secondary outbreaks of the mites at both sampling locations across all sampling years. Our findings could not point to natural enemy disruption as a mechanism of the increased abundance of mites on treated elm trees. Thus, we evaluated elm spider mite fecundity, and found that mites consuming leaves from imidacloprid treated elms laid significantly more eggs than mites feeding on untreated leaves. Greater abundance of mites on elms receiving imidacloprid did not seem to arise from elimination of natural enemies, but rather through a plant-mediated or direct positive effect of the insecticide on mite fecundity. Further experiments are planned to elucidate the exact mechanism that leads to increased fecundity exhibited by the spider mites.