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Red spider mite The red spider mite or two spotted spider mite
(Tetranychus urticae) is a feared pest on several crops all
over the world. At first sight it is not easily distinguished from
the carmine spider mite (Tetranychus cinnabarinus) that sometimes
occurs on tomato, carnation
or other ornamentals.
The female deposits round eggs of about 0.14 mm on the underside
of the leaf. Out of the egg a larva with 6 legs hatches that immediately
starts sucking plant sap. Subsequently, the larva develops into
a protonymph, followed by a deutonymph and an adult stage. The development
stages are separated by a quiescent stage, during which the mite
settles immobile on the leaf with its legs drawn in.
Once the mite has become adult, it takes another 0.5 to 3 days
before the female starts laying eggs (pre-oviposition period). The
total deveolopment time varies a lot with temperature, humidity
and host plant. In an experiment on rose leaf it appeared to take
7 days at 30°C (86°F), 17 days at 20°C (68°F) and 36 days at 15°C
(59°F).
In a population there are about 3 times more females than males.
Generally male spider mites can be found in close association with
quiescent female deutonymphs, waiting for the latter to complete
their development. Unfertilized females only give birth to males.
The female lays her eggs during 10 days (at 35°C or 95°F) to 40
days (at 15°C or 59°F). At 20°C (68°F) she lays about 40 eggs in
total, but under optimal circumstances this can mount up to 100.
Especially at dry and warm weather red spider mites can reproduce
very rapidly.
In autumn, when temperature and photoperiod drop, fertilised females
enter diapause. Such females turn orange-red. They hide in all kinds
of cracks in the greenhouse, to appear again early in the following
season when circumstances improve.
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