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The smell of death sends mites to sleep

24 September 2008

CATCHING the whiff of a nearby massacre has a strange effect on spider mites: it sends them straight to sleep.

Martijn Egas and colleagues at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands noticed that when the mites encountered predators, they went into hiding and entered a dormant state called diapause, normally used during long periods of cold, drought or famine.

Curious about whether this discovery could be used against the crop-destroying mites, the team put them inside parallel wind tunnels that were infused with air from chambers containing other spider mites that were either peacefully munching on bean leaves, or…

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