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Repellency of forty‐one aromatic plant species to the Asian citrus psyllid,vector of the bacterium associated with huanglongbing
Authors:Zhaogui Yan  Qun Zhang  Nan Zhang  Wan Li  Cuiying Chang  Yan Xiang  Changxiu Xia  Tengyu Jiang  Wei He  Jie Luo  Yongrong Xu
Institution:1. College of Horticulture and Forestry Sciences/Hubei Engineering Technology Research Center for Forestry Information, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan China ; 2. School of Environmental & Rural Science, The University of New England, Armidale NSW, Australia ; 3. Ganzhou Citrus Science Research Institute, Ganzhou China ; 4. Zhongnan Institute of Survey, Ministry of Forestry and Grass, Changsha China
Abstract:Huanglongbing (HLB) is the most devastating citrus disease worldwide. The organism associated with the disease is spread by an insect vector, Diaphorina citri, commonly known as Asian citrus psyllid (ACP). Current management of HLB relies either on physical removal of the infected plants or on chemical control of ACP. Both methods are costly and not overly effective. In addition, public concerns regarding insecticide residues in fruit have greatly increased in recent years. It has been hypothesized that plant volatiles could act as repellents to ACP, thus reduce the incidence of HLB. To test this hypothesis, the repellency of fresh tissues of 41 aromatic plant species to ACP was investigated. The repellency of individual species was determined using a Y‐tube olfactometer. Our results showed that volatiles of five plant species were highly effective in repelling ACP with repellency as much as 76%. Among these, the tree species, Camptotheca acuminate, and the two shrubs, Lantana camara and Mimosa bimucronata, could potentially be planted as a landscape barrier. The two herbs, Capsicum annuum and Gynura bicolor, could potentially be used as interplantings in orchards. This is the first time that the repellency of fresh tissues from a diverse range of plant species to ACP has been determined. Although further field evaluation of various interplanting regimes and landscape barriers are needed to assess their effectiveness, our results showed that these aromatic species, being highly repellent to ACP, offer great potential as more cost‐effective and environmentally sustainable alternatives to the current methods of managing HLB.
Keywords:biological control  citrus greening disease  Diaphorina citri  insect vector  plant repellency  volatile
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