Title: | Mating Disruption of Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) on Processing Tomato: First Applications in Northern Italy |
Author(s): | Burgio G; Ravaglia F; Maini S; Bazzocchi GG; Masetti A; Lanzoni A; |
Address: | "Department of Agricultural and Food Sciences, Alma Mater Studiorum - Universita di Bologna, University of Bologna, Viale G. Fanin, 42, 40127 Bologna, Italy" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 2075-4450 (Print) 2075-4450 (Electronic) 2075-4450 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Helicoverpa armigera is a polyphagous and globally distributed pest. In Italy, this species causes severe damage on processing tomato. We compared the efficacy of mating disruption with a standard integrated pest management strategy (IPM) in a two-year experiment carried out in Northern Italy. Mating disruption registered a very high suppression of male captures (>95%) in both growing seasons. Geostatistical analysis of trap catches was shown to be a useful tool to estimate the efficacy of the technique through representation of the spatial pattern of captures. Lower fruit damage was recorded in mating disruption than in the untreated control plots, with a variable efficacy depending on season and sampling date. Mating disruption showed a higher efficacy than standard IPM in controlling H. armigera infestation in the second season experiment. Mating disruption showed the potential to optimize the H. armigera control. Geostatistical maps were suitable to draw the pheromone drift out of the pheromone-treated area in order to evaluate the efficacy of the technique and to detect the weak points in a pheromone treated field. Mating disruption and standard IPM against H. armigera were demonstrated to be only partially effective in comparison with the untreated plots because both strategies were not able to fully avoid fruit damage" |
Keywords: | cotton bollworm geostatistics mating disruption processing tomato; |
Notes: | "PubMed-not-MEDLINEBurgio, Giovanni Ravaglia, Fabio Maini, Stefano Bazzocchi, Giovanni Giorgio Masetti, Antonio Lanzoni, Alberto eng Switzerland 2020/04/01 Insects. 2020 Mar 26; 11(4):206. doi: 10.3390/insects11040206" |