Developing a mealybug pheromone monitoring tool to enhance IPM practices in New Zealand vineyards
Mealybugs are phloem-feeding insects found on many crops worldwide. In New Zealand vineyards, they transmit the economically important Grapevine leafroll-associated virus 3 (GLRaV-3). For some mealybug species, synthetic sex pheromones have been commercialised, and are used as monitoring tools. The...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of pest science 2023, Vol.96 (1), p.29-39 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Mealybugs are phloem-feeding insects found on many crops worldwide. In New Zealand vineyards, they transmit the economically important
Grapevine leafroll-associated virus 3
(GLRaV-3). For some mealybug species, synthetic sex pheromones have been commercialised, and are used as monitoring tools. The mealybugs
Pseudococcus longispinus
and
Pseudococcus calceolariae
are major pests in many New Zealand vineyards. We present work on the development of a combined
P. longispinus
and
P. calceolariae
pheromone lure. The optimal dose for monitoring
P. longispinus
was found to be 10 µg of the (
S
)-(+)-enantiomer, either alone or in the racemic mixture. Addition of the corresponding alcohol did not improve trap catch of
P. longispinus
. Both the
P. longispinus
and the
P. calceolariae
pheromone lures remained active in the field for 90 days. Combining the 2 species’ pheromones had no negative effects on male mealybug trap catch for either species. We conclude that the pheromone ester alone is the best lure for the male
P. longispinus
. Combining the two mealybug species’ pheromones into a single lure provides the New Zealand viticultural industry with an efficient monitoring tool. Late-vintage deployment of baited lures will provide information on mealybug abundance and local distribution that will inform the scope of future insecticide programmes, to target areas based on need rather than an area-wide application by default. |
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ISSN: | 1612-4758 1612-4766 1612-4766 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10340-022-01504-5 |