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Cited 17 time in webofscience Cited 20 time in scopus
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Inclusion of Specialist and Generalist Stimuli in Attract-and-Kill Programs: Their Relative Efficacy in Apple Maggot Fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) Pest Management

Authors
Morrison, William R., IIILee, Doo-HyungReissig, W. HarveyCombs, DavidLeahy, KathleenTuttle, ArthurCooley, DanielLeskey, Tracy C.
Issue Date
Aug-2016
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
Keywords
integrated pest management; semiochemical; tephritid; attract and kill; Malus domestica
Citation
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, v.45, no.4, pp.974 - 982
Journal Title
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume
45
Number
4
Start Page
974
End Page
982
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/8039
DOI
10.1093/ee/nvw043
ISSN
0046-225X
Abstract
Investigating the chemical ecology of agricultural systems continues to be a salient part of integrated pest management programs. Apple maggot fly, a key pest of apple in eastern North America, is a visual specialist with attraction to host fruit-mimicking cues. These cues have been incorporated into red spherical traps used for both monitoring and behaviorally based management. Incorporating generalist or specialist olfactory cues can potentially increase the overall success of this management system. The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the attractiveness of a generalist olfactory cue, ammonium carbonate, and the specialist olfactory cue, a five-component apple volatile blend, when included as a component of a red attracticidal sphere system. Secondly, we assessed how critical it was to maintain minimal deviation from the optimal, full-round specialist visual stimulus provided by red spheres. Finally, attracticidal spheres were deployed with specialist olfactory cues in commercial apple orchards to evaluate their potential for effective management of apple maggot. Ammonium carbonate did not increase residency, feeding time, or mortality in the laboratory-based trials. Field deployment of specialist olfactory cues increased apple maggot captures on red spheres, while the generalist cue did not. Apple maggot tolerated some deviation from the optimal visual stimulus without reducing captures on red spheres. Attracticidal spheres hung in perimeter trees in orchards resulted in acceptable and statistically identical levels of control compared with standard insecticide programs used by growers. Overall, our study contributes valuable information for developing a reliable attract-and-kill system for apple maggot.
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