Terrestrial animals are widely considered to be well protected from damage caused by ambient UV radiation, and thus the direct effects of solar UV-B radiation on arthropods have not attracted a great deal of attention. However, if plant-dwelling arthropods have evolved behavioral adaptations to solar UV-B radiation, but not morphological or physiological adaptations, the resources available to them would be strongly limited. Tetranychus urticae and their dominant natural enemies, phytoseiid mites, usually stay on the lower leaf surfaces. Because of the accumulation of UV-B-absorbing compounds such as flavonoids in the leaves, the upper and lower leaf surfaces provide different UV environments.
We tested whether UV irradiation affects survival and reproduction of T. urticae and, if so, whether staying on the lower leaf surfaces is beneficial for their performance in solar UV radiation. Consequently, we observed lethal effects of artificial UV-B irradiation and solar UV radiation on T. urticae. However, by remaining on lower leaf surfaces, the mites could avoid such deleterious effects. These suggest that staying on the lower leaf surfaces is a behavioral adaptation of T. urticae to avoiding harmful solar UV-B radiation. Lethal effects of UV-B irradiation also exerted strong deterrent effects on the hatchability of phytoseiid mites. Additionally, preliminary experiments suggested that phytoseiid mites avoided and quickly escaped from a place irradiated by solar UV.
Therefore, solar UV-B radiation may strongly affect the diurnal and spatial patterns of distribution or migration of mite communities on host plant canopies.