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1.
Granular and liquid formulations of chlorfenvinphos were applied to a sandy-loam as continuous logarithmically-changing doses of approximately 0.2 to 4.0 kg a.i./ha and radish were sown immediately and 23 days after treatment. After 62 days, insecticide concentrations in the soil had not diminished detectably in the granule treatment but had declined by about 20% in the liquid treatment. In both sowings, residues in the harvested radish were higher, dose-for-dose, from the granule than from the liquid treatment and with both formulations were lower in the second than in the first sowing. Within treatments there were log-log relationships between the dose of insecticide and residue concentrations in the soil and radish. In both sowings the residues were most variable between replicate soil and crop samples from the granule treatment. In the first sowing, cabbage root fly damage was reduced most by the liquid treatment but in the second sowing equivalent doses of the two formulations gave similar protection. At 2.0, 2.24 or 3.0 kg a.i./ha, chlorfenvinphos incorporated before sowing protected radish better than pre-sowing or pre-emergence applications to the soil surface. When applied before sowing, the liquid formulation gave better protection and lower residue concentrations in the radish than the granules. As a post-emergence spray, chlorfenvinphos was much more effective than fonofos, diazinon or triazophos but it was often phytotoxic, decreased yield significantly, left large residues in the radish in two of the four experiments and, in common with other surface treatments, substantially decreased the Z:E chlorfenvinphos isomer ratio. Although a single application of granules protected two successive radish crops, it was concluded that third and subsequent sowings on the same land should probably be treated with smaller doses to limit terminal residues.  相似文献   

2.
Effects of combinations of insecticides and herbicides on the growth and yield of cauliflower plants (cvs No. 110, Garant and Strong) were determined in two field experiments with seed drilled to give a stand of c. 300000 plants/ha. Granular formulations of chlorfenvinphos or fonofos were applied by the bow-wave method at 2 kg a.i./ha to control cabbage root fly (Delia brassicae). Weeds were successfully controlled with combinations of trifluralin, incorporated into the soil at 0·6 or 1·2 kg a.i./ha before drilling, and propachlor, applied pre-emergence at 2·2 or 4·4 kg a.i./ha. Fonofos, with and without herbicides, significantly lessened (P < 0·01) numbers of seedlings that would survive to harvest. Herbicides and chlorfenvinphos generally did not significantly affect the emergence of healthy seedlings of any cultivar. Combinations of herbicides and chlorfenvinphos were compatible for control of target species. Chlorfenvinphos reduced root damage by at least 50% but did not significantly increase (P > 0·05) the total or marketable weight of curds. Numbers of curds were not usually affected and consistent effects of treatments on maturation periods of the three cultivars were not detected.  相似文献   

3.
Field experiments were done in a sandy loam in 1979 and 1980 to investigate the performance against carrot fly on carrots of e. c. and granular formulations of chlorfenvinphos incorporated in gels used for drilling pre-germinated seed. With 9·4–66·7 mg a. i./m row, the two formulations performed similarly in a natural hydrocolloid and a mineral colloid gel. Thus the emergence of carrot seedlings 6–7 wk after drilling was similar on plots with untreated gel and those with insecticide-treated gel and, about 6 months after drilling when > 90% of carrots grown without insecticide were damaged by carrot fly larvae, an approximately six-fold increase in dose of both formulations increased the estimated larval mortality from about 70 to 95%. Mean concentrations of residues of total (Z + E) isomers of chlorfenvinphos in harvested carrots treated with 9·4–56·5 mg a. i./m row were50% of the insecticide had been released into both gels.  相似文献   

4.
Foam-rubber, carpet-underlay discs placed in position around the base of the stem directly after transplanting were as effective as certain recommended insecticides in protecting brassica plants from damage by cabbage root fly (Delia radicum). The three factors that contributed to the overall effectiveness of the discs were that only half as many eggs were laid around plants protected with discs as around unprotected plants, that predatory ground beetles preferred to aggregate in the humid microhabitat beneath the discs and consequently ate proportionally more fly eggs/larvae and that the discs acted as a mulch, conserving water around the roots of the plants, and thereby permitting them to tolerate greater amounts of damage. Application of the repellent benzyl benzoate to the discs improved effectiveness but 12 other insect repellents and two sticky compounds gave no improvement and most were phytotoxic. Root drenches of the insecticide chlorfenvinphos were repellent, reducing oviposition by approximately 25%. The costs of protecting brassica transplants with either discs or insecticide were similar and discs thus appear to be a reasonable method of cabbage root fly control for small-scale use.  相似文献   

5.
To study the effects of plant density on populations of the cabbage root fly (Erioischia brassicae), cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprout and swede were each planted in plots with twenty-four concentric circles of plants at spacings ranging from 10 to 90 cm between the individual plants. Plants treated with a root drench of chlorfenvinphos and untreated plants were each sampled at ten plant densities which ranged from 1–5 to 68-3 plants/m2. In the absence of insecticide, the numbers of overwintering cabbage root fly pupae produced ranged from c. four per m2 at the lowest plant density to 200 per m2 at the highest. The number of pupae per m2 was proportional to plant density to the powers 0–98,0-77,0–69 and o-6i for the swede, cauliflower, cabbage and Brussels sprout crops, respectively. The magnitude of each cabbage root fly population was determined mainly by plant density but also by the cultivar used as host plant. The results suggested that, in a given locality, when changing from low to high plant density crops during a growing season it should be unnecessary to apply insecticide to control cabbage root fly; conversely, a change from high to low plant densities would necessitate an extremely efficient application of insecticide.  相似文献   

6.
Cabbage root fly ( Delia brassicae ) egg-laying around radish plants ranging in age from newly emerged seedlings to plants with flowering shoots was studied in the field and laboratory. The attractiveness of radish changed with age, one peak in egg-laying occurring just before plants were of marketable size and further peaks as they produced flowering shoots. The pattern of egg-laying was similar for the six radish cultivars tested, both in the field and laboratory, irrespective of whether flies did or did not have a choice of plants of different ages. At any one age, there was no correlation between egg-laying and plant size. Selection within radish cultivars for the extremes of the range of egg-laying preference appeared to alter the cycle of attractiveness of different radish stocks to cabbage root fly, the response being influenced by environmental conditions.  相似文献   

7.
Tractor mounted equipment is needed to deliver granular formulations of pesticides accurately to the soil in small-plot trials in a manner comparable to commercial equipment. Inexpensive units incorporating a belt unit mechanism were designed and fitted to a Mk II Stanhay S-870 Precision Seed-Spacing Drill. The individual delivery belts were driven through a continuously-variable reduction gearbox by the main drive shaft of the drill and pre-weighed amounts of granules were placed along the belts. Insecticides and dose patterns could thereby be changed readily from plot to plot. In field assessments of uniform doses of fuller's earth granules delivered to single row, 4·8 and 10·3 m plots, the mean weights recovered were 94–98% of the target doses, S.E.'s being ±2% of the means. When 16-fold, exponentially-increasing doses were delivered, the weights recovered were generally within 10% of the target dose at any point within 0·2 m from the start and 0·3 m from the finish of the plot. The performance of uniform doses of carbofuran (on sand) and chlorfenvinphos (on Spanish Silical) against cabbage root fly on radish in 15 m plots showed that errors in loading were insignificant compared with the variability in pest infestation on the field plots. With doses increasing exponentially by c. 12-fold applied to similar plots, the percentage of carrots or radish undamaged by carrot fly and cabbage root fly increased from 40–60% to 85–99·3%, the relationship between the log-log proportion of undamaged roots and log-dose being linear. The equipment allows free-flowing, granular pesticide products to be applied to small plots of a wide range of row-crops much more accurately than has hitherto been possible. A work rate of 24 plots h-1 was achieved by a team of two technicians and a tractor driver.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of insecticide and fungicide applications to swedes (Brassica napus var. napobrassica) were examined at 15 sites in England from 1974 to 1978. Several different pesticide combinations were applied including carbofuran granules at drilling (63 mg a. i./m of row), demeton-S-methyl sprays (0·24 kg a. i./ha) and fluotrimazole sprays (0·18 kg a. i./ha). The best treatments, which varied in different years, gave significantly higher yields than no treatment in 12 out of a total of 15 trials, with varying levels of damage attributable to cabbage root fly (Delia brassicae), aphids (Myzus persicae) and powdery mildew (Erysiphe cruciferarum) in each of the 4 years. In 10 of 12 trials, plots receiving a complete insecticide and fungicide programme yielded on average 40% (range 21–61%) more than untreated plots, mainly through control of root fly and aphids in 1975 and of aphids and mildew in 1976. Aphid damage to swedes was exceptionally severe in both years. Granular formulations of aldicarb, carbofuran, chlorfenvinphos or fonofos used alone to prevent cabbage root fly damage gave significant yield benefits in only 8 of the 15 trials, with least effect in 1977 and 1978 when growing conditions for swedes were good and damage relatively light.  相似文献   

9.
Radish populations selected from the cvs Asmer Tip Top and Sparkler on the basis of high or low preference by the cabbage root fly for egg laying were tested at different ages by exposing them to the pest in a laboratory test chamber. Results confirmed the existence of a cycle of changing attractiveness of radish for egg laying, the peak occurring as plants reached a marketable age. Selection within radish cvs for different levels of preference resulted in a shift in the cycle of attraction such that ‘high-preference’ plants reached a peak in attractiveness earlier than ‘low-preference’ ones. Egg laying was correlated with the total amounts of two volatile glucosinolate hydrolysis products (4–methylthio-3–butenyl isothiocyanate and 1–cyano-4–methyl-thio-3–butene) detected in ether extracts of macerated radishes. The relationship between chemicals and egg laying suggested a possible chemical assay to complement biological techniques for identifying cabbage root fly-resistant radish for breeding work.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of insecticides on Carabid and Staphylinid predators on the egg stage of the cabbage root fly was studied. Diazinon and chlorfenvinphos granules were applied around the base of cabbage transplants, either on the surface or under the surface of the soil. Both the diazinon treatments reduced significantly the number of Carabid and Staphylinid predators in the plots for a period of approximately 11 weeks. These losses were significantly reduced in the sub-surface treatment compared with the surface treatment.The Carabids were found to be remarkably tolerant to the chlorfenvinphos insecticide. The number of Carabids captured in the treated plots did not differ from that of the control. On the other hand the Staphylinids were significantly reduced by the treatments.At the same time predation on the egg stage of the cabbage root fly was studied in each treatment, using individual plant barriers to exclude beetle predators from around certain plants. Predation by Carabids and Staphylinids was found to reduce significantly the cabbage root fly egg population in the field.
Zusammenfassung Die Wirkung von Insektiziden auf Carabiden und Staphyliniden, die als Räuber die Eier der Kohlfliege Erioischia brassicae (Bouché) fressen, wurde geprüft. Diazinon- und Chlorfenvinphos-Granulate wurden rund um die einzelnen Kohlpflanzen angebracht, entweder direkt auf den Boden oder unter die Bodenoberfläche. Diazinon reduzierte in beiden Fällen signifikant die Zahl der Carabiden und Staphyliniden für eine Zeit von annähernd 11 Wochen. Die Abtötung war jedoch bei unterirdischer Applikation des Insektizids vergleichsweise geringer als bei oberflächlicher Anwendung.Es wurde gefunden, dass die Carabiden gegen Chlorfenvinphos auffällig tolerant waren. Die Anzahl der auf der behandelten Parzelle gefangenen Carabiden unterschied sich nicht von der unbehandelten. Die Staphyliniden dagegen wurden durch die Behandlung signifikant reduziert.Zur gleichen Zeit wurde bei jeder Behandlung die Vernichtung der Kohlfliegeneier durch diese Räuber untersucht, indem die Käfer durch Metallbarrieren von einzelnen Pflanzen ferngehalten wurden. Es wurde festgestellt, dass durch Carabiden und Staphyliniden die Zahl der Kohlfliegeneier signifikant vermindert wurde.Verglich man beide Behandlungsarten miteinander, so war die Zahl der Eier beim Einbringen der Mittel unter die Bodenoberfläche mehr vermindert als bei oberflächlicher Anwendung. Allerdings war die Zahl der Eier auch bei unbehandeltem Boden weniger vermindert als zunächst erwartet wurde. Diese Differenz war jedoch statistisch nicht zu sichern.
  相似文献   

11.
Reliable options to control the cabbage root fly, Delia radicum L., are lacking in many countries as restrictions on insecticide use have tightened due to environmental concerns. Although microbial control agents are often considered as a sustainable alternative, their application in agriculture is constrained by inconsistent efficacy owing to low field persistence. To stimulate naturally occurring beneficial microbes, soil amendment with the residual streams of insect production has been suggested as an alternative to synthetic fertilization and a new approach to microbial crop protection. In a set of greenhouse experiments, exuviae and frass of black soldier fly larvae, Hermetia illucens L., house crickets, Acheta domesticus L. and exuviae of mealworms, Tenebrio molitor L., were added to soil from an organically managed field. Exuviae and frass treatments were compared to treatments with synthetic fertilizer. Brussels sprouts, Brassica oleracea L., plants were grown in amended soil for 5 weeks before being infested with cabbage root fly larvae. Insect and plant performance were assessed by recording cabbage root fly survival, biomass and eclosion time and seed germination and plant biomass, respectively. Whereas soil amendment with black soldier fly frass or exuviae reduced cabbage root fly survival and biomass, respectively, amendment with house cricket or mealworm residual streams did not negatively affect root fly performance. Furthermore, seed germination was reduced in soil amended with house cricket exuviae, while amendment with either residual stream derived from black soldier fly larvae or house crickets resulted in lower plant shoot biomass compared with the synthetic fertilizer treatment. Amending soil with black soldier fly residual streams could become a novel and low-cost tool to be integrated in cabbage root fly management programmes, especially where methods currently available are insufficient. Therefore, the mechanisms underlying the effects of insect-derived soil amendments described here should be the focus of future research.  相似文献   

12.
Domestication of plants and selection for agronomic traits may reduce plant secondary defence metabolites relative to their ancestors. Carrot (Daucus carota L.) is an economically important vegetable. Recently, carrot was developed as a functional food with additional health-promoting functions. Biofortified carrots contain increased concentrations of chlorogenic acid as an antioxidant. Chlorogenic acid is involved in host plant resistance to Western Flower Thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis), one of the key agri- and horticultural pests worldwide. The objective of this study was to investigate quantitative host plant resistance to thrips in carrot and to identify candidate compounds for constitutive resistance. As such we explored whether cultivated carrot is more vulnerable to herbivore attack compared to wild carrot. We subjected a set of 14 biofortified, cultivated and wild carrot genotypes to thrips infestation. We compared morphological traits and leaf metabolic profiles of the three most resistant and susceptible carrots using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). In contrast to our expectation, wild carrots were not more resistant to thrips than cultivated ones. The most thrips resistant carrot was the cultivar Ingot which is known to be tolerant against carrot root fly (Psila rosae). Biofortified carrots were not resistant to thrips. Plant size, leaf area and number of leaf hairs did not differ between resistant and susceptible carrots. The metabolic profiles of the leaves of resistant carrots were significantly different from those of susceptible carrots. The leaves of resistant carrots contained higher amounts of the flavanoid luteolin, the phenylpropanoid sinapic acid and the amino acid β-alanine. The negative effect of these compounds on thrips was confirmed using in-vitro bioassays. Our results have potential implications for carrot breeders. The natural variation of metabolites present in cultivated carrots can be used for improvement of thrips resistance. This is especially promising in view of the candidate compounds we identified since they do not only confer a negative effect on thrips but as antioxidants also play an important role in the improvement of human health.  相似文献   

13.
To determine the importance of beetle predators on the natural control of cabbage root fly, experiments were carried out in 1958 and 1959 using various types of barriers to obtain different levels of beetle populations on cauliflower plots. A barrier of DDT-treated straw, placed in the soil around some plots, decreased the numbers of beetles within them and allowed a greater number of eggs and larvae of cabbage root fly to survive than on the untreated plots, resulting in a greater crop damage. Another type of barrier allowed the beetles to enter plots but made it difficult for them to leave. On these, fewer cabbage root-fly eggs and larvae survived and the crop damage was much less than on the plots surrounded by straw barriers. Where plants were treated with insecticide the root-fly population was reduced to a minimum and crop yields were considerably increased. The insecticide, however, caused a reduction in the numbers of predatory beetles.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of various cropping sequences on population densities of Meloidogyne hapla and carrot yield was studied in organic soil under microplot-and field conditions. Spinach, radish, barley, oat, and wheat were poor or nonhosts for M. hapla. Population densities of M. hapla were maintained or increased on cabbage, celery, lettuce, leek, marigold, and potato. Marketable percent-age and root weight of carrots were greater following spinach, oat, radish, and fallow-onion than those following two crops of onion or carrot in microplots. Under field conditions, the carrot-onion-oat-carrot cropping sequence decreased M. hapla population densities and provided a 282% increase in marketable yield of carrot compared to a carrot monoculture. Two consecutive years of onion increased M. hapla population densities causing severe root galling and a 50% yield loss in the following crop of carrot. Based on root-gall indices, carrots could be grown economically for 2 years following radish, spinach, and oat, but not following onion and carrot without the use of nematicides.  相似文献   

15.
Chemical control of insect pests is often necessary to ensure high yields of field crops. The aim of the present study was to study whether field pesticide use influences amount of pest damage in neighbouring garden crops. Spring oilseed rape, OSR (Brassica napus L.), was established in Southern Sweden as an example of an agricultural field crop. One half of the OSR field was treated with insecticides to control flea beetles (Phyllotreta spp., Chrysomelidae) and pollen beetle (Meligethes aeneus Fab., Nitidulidae). Radish (Raphanus sativus L.) was used as an example of a common garden crop and it was sown as four replications at three different distances and on four occasions during the season. Care was taken to protect the radish plots from pesticide due to wind drift during applications. Damage to the radish by flea beetle and cabbage root fly (Delia radicum L., Anthomyiidae) along with unspecified leaf damage was recorded. Significantly lower damage by flea beetles was found on cotyledons of radish adjacent to the insecticide treated side of the OSR field compared to the untreated side in radishes from the first sowing. Unspecified damage to true leaves was also less abundant on radishes at the treated side of the OSR field as compared to the untreated side, in all three of the radish harvests analysed. However, radish plot distance from the OSR field did not influence leaf damage. Root fly damage rates in radish did not differ significantly between those adjacent to the treated and untreated sides of the OSR. Damage rates were, however, higher in the radish plots closest to the OSR field in the first sowing, which coincides with the appearance of the first ovipositing females after overwintering as pupae elsewhere. Generally, insecticide treatment in the agricultural field appeared to influence overall damage in the neighbouring garden crop, despite the fact that the garden crop was protected against wind drift of the insecticides during applications.  相似文献   

16.
A comparison was made over five seasons of carrot fly (Psila rosae) damage on two carrot cultivars, Sytan and Danvers, which represented the extremes of resistance discovered in screening trials at Wellesbourne. Plants were harvested regularly during the seasons and at each harvest the number and weight of roots was recorded and carrot fly damage was assessed using various techniques; in 1979-80 the numbers of carrot fly larvae and pupae in and around root samples were counted. The experiments confirmed repeatedly the relative resistance of cv. Sytan compared with Danvers. The estimated reduction in carrot fly larvae on Sytan relative to Danvers in early November in four seasons ranged from 40% to 67%. When tested against first generation carrot fly attack the reduction in larvae on Sytan was 54%. There were 45% fewer mines per root on Sytan resulting in less damage at each harvest in all seasons. Larvae took longer to develop on Sytan than Danvers and 18% more plants of Sytan survived carrot fly attack. Differences in seedstock, season, sowing time, generation of carrot fly, plant size and density did not account for observed differences in damage between the two cultivars. The studies indicated satisfactory practical techniques for assessing carrot fly damage in cultivar screening trials.  相似文献   

17.
A laboratory method for testing cruciferous plants for their non-preference resistance to cabbage root fly is described. Test plants were fully randomized on a turntable inside a large chamber containing cabbage root flies. The apparatus was housed in a controlled environment room. The root-fly eggs, laid in the sand surrounding test plants, were extracted using a flask flotation method which was quicker and more efficient than the stirring technique which it superseded. Two batches of plants were tested alternately, one being exposed to the flies, while the other was sampled for eggs. Each batch of test plants received three 1-day exposures to egg-laying, their positions within the test chamber being changed for each exposure to ensure complete randomization. This test method gave highly consistent results and indicated that there were differences in the flies' preference both between cultivars of radish and cauliflower and for individual plants within cultivars. Plants representing the extremes of preferences discovered in the two crops were saved for further study. It was not possible to correlate seed weight, time of seedling emergence, foliage surface area, or hypocotyl attitude in relation to soil level, with the egg-laying preference of the cabbage root flies.  相似文献   

18.
Overwintered adult carrot psyllids [Trioza apicalis Förster (Homoptera: Psylloidea: Triozidae)] damage carrot [(Daucus carota ssp. sativum L.) (Apiaceae)] seedlings by phloem feeding on the leaves. The aim of this study was to investigate the carrot root and shoot growth in relation to carrot psyllid density during early growth stages. One, two, or three carrot psyllids were allowed to feed on carrot seedlings for 3 days. Leaf damage was measured at the 8‐leaf stage, and root, leaf fresh weight, and number of true leaves were measured at harvest. Both the age of the carrot seedling at infestation and the psyllid density had a significant effect on leaf damage at the 8‐leaf stage: seedlings damaged at the cotyledon stage exhibited more leaf damage than seedlings damaged at the 1‐leaf stage. A higher psyllid density significantly reduced the carrot root weight at harvest. The significant interaction of psyllid density with seedling age indicates that differently aged carrot seedlings responded differently to feeding: one psyllid feeding for 3 days at the cotyledon stage caused a significant yield loss, whereas three psyllids were needed to cause the same impact at the 1‐leaf stage. Carrot leaf weight at harvest was not reduced by carrot psyllid feeding: leaves recovered from the damage but roots did not. Our results confirm the farmers’ observations that a trap replacement period of 1 week for carrot psyllid monitoring is too long, especially at the cotyledon stage. Severe leaf discolouration on damaged carrots was observed at harvest. The possible reasons for this discolouration, such as toxin excreted in psyllid saliva or plant pathogenic mycoplasma infection, are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The absorption and translocation of atrazine and linuron bycarrot, parsnip, lettuce, and turnip seedlings in culture solutionswere measured. There were marked differences among species inthe distribution of herbicide within the plant. A high proportionof the linuron absorbed by carrot and parsnip seedlings wasretained in their root systems whereas in lettuce and turnipover 60 per cent of the herbicide absorbed was translocatedto the shoot. With atrazine, differences were also apparentbut were much less marked. The amounts of herbicide translocatedwere directly proportional to the amounts of water transpiredby the plants but the effective concentrations in the transpirationstream were always less than those in the treatment solutions.Examination of the extracts from the different plant speciesby thin-layer chromatography showed that up to 45 per cent ofthe linuron translocated in parsnip and carrot was present asmetabolites, but little metabolism had occurred in the shootsof lettuce and turnip or in the roots of any of the species.The data suggest that the tolerance of parsnip and carrot seedlingsto linuron results from a combination of root fixation and metabolismin the shoot.  相似文献   

20.
The relationship between shoot and storage root weights of carrot,parsnip, radish and red beet was examined using plants of differentsize and age. For both carrot and parsnip plants of the sameage there was a linear relationship between the logarithms ofshoot and storage root d. wts which was unaffected by plantdensity. For parsnip the parameters of the regression were unchangedby harvest time, while for carrot the slope of the regressionremained constant and the intercept progressively declined withharvest time. These observations are consistent with an hypothesisof assimilate partition based on competition between sinks.For both radish and red beet at very high densities the logarithmicrelationship between shoot and storage root weight was curvilinearwith significant effects of both harvest time and density. Itis suggested that interplant competition may affect the initiationof storage tissue development in both these species. It is concludedthat for radish and red beet, even when considering only plantsproducing normal swollen storage roots, partition of assimilateis affected by factors not incorporated into the above hypothesis. Root crop, carrot, parsnip, radish, red beet, partition of assimilated carbon, model  相似文献   

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