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<records>

  <record>
    <language>eng</language>
          <publisher>Enviro Research Publishers</publisher>
        <journalTitle>Current Agriculture Research Journal</journalTitle>
          <issn>2347-4688</issn>
              <eissn>2321-9971</eissn>
        <publicationDate>2014-06-30</publicationDate>
    
        <volume>2</volume>
        <issue>1</issue>

 
    <startPage>01</startPage>
    <endPage>04</endPage>

         <doi></doi>
        <publisherRecordId>772</publisherRecordId>
    <documentType>article</documentType>
    <title language="eng">Notes on Predatory Behaviour in Rhinacloa Forticornis (Hemiptera: Miridae)</title>

    <authors>
	 


      <author>
       <name>T.W. Culliney</name>

 
		
	<affiliationId>1</affiliationId>
      </author>
    

	

	

	


	


	
    </authors>
    
	    <affiliationsList>
	    
		
		<affiliationName affiliationId="1">Department of Entomology, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.A.</affiliationName>
    

		
		
		
		
		
	  </affiliationsList>






    <abstract language="eng">Predatory behaviour in the phyline mirid, <em>Rhinacloa forticornis</em> Reuter, was observed in the laboratory. Jasmine flowers and bean pods infested with larval and adult thrips were exposed in petri dishes to nymphs and adults of the bug. Only thrips larvae were successfully attacked. The manner in which <em>R. forticornis</em> handled prey, particularly the mirid’s use of its fore tarsi to position and manipulate prey and its probing in different body regions, and the feeding process, involving the ingestion and egestion of fluids, and thus a potential role for extra-oral digestion of prey tissues, were suggestive of similar behaviours in predaceous Heteroptera. However, observations of apparently preferential feeding on vegetable matter in the presence of available prey suggested that phytophagy is an important, perhaps predominant, feeding mode in this plant bug, with predation occurring in nature in the absence of acceptable plant food.</abstract>

    <fullTextUrl format="html">http://www.agriculturejournal.org/volume2number1/notes-on-predatory-behaviour-in-rhinacloa-forticornis-hemiptera-miridae/</fullTextUrl>



      <keywords language="eng">
        <keyword>Facultative Predation</keyword>
      </keywords>

      <keywords language="eng">
        <keyword> Heteroptera</keyword>
      </keywords>

      <keywords language="eng">
        <keyword> Nutritional Ecology</keyword>
      </keywords>

      <keywords language="eng">
        <keyword> Plant Bugs</keyword>
      </keywords>

      <keywords language="eng">
        <keyword> Thrips</keyword>
      </keywords>

  </record>
</records>