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Control of Codling Moth,Cydia pomonella (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), with Steinernema carpocapsae: Effects of Supplemental Wetting and Pupation Site on Infection Rate
Institution:1. Agronomy Department, Federal Technological University of Paraná, Pato Branco, PR CEP 85501-970, Brazil;2. Forest Engineering Department, Federal University of Jequitinhonha and Mucuri Valley, Diamantina, MG CEP 39100-000, Brazil;3. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ 07102, USA;4. Department of Agronomy, The State University of Maringa, Maringá, PR CEP 87020-900, Brazil;5. Soil Science Department, Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture, Piracicaba, SP CEP 13418-900, Brazil
Abstract:Infection of cocooned codling moth (cydia pomonella) larvae by the entomopathogenic nematode Steinernema carpocapsae was studied in three field experiments. Factors that varied within or between experiments included method of application, type of substrate containing cocooned larvae, time when nematodes were applied, seasonal effects, and supplemental wetting before or after nematode application. Conventional air-blast sprayer applications of 0.5–5.0 million infective juveniles (IJs)/tree in fall resulted in ca. 30% mortality of larvae in cardboard trap bands, whereas hand-gun application (2 million IJs/tree) produced mortality of ca. 70%. Application in the evening caused higher larval mortality than application in the morning when no supplemental wetting was used after treatments. Morning and evening applications caused equivalent larval mortality when a postwetting treatment was included. In a trial conducted in midsummer, supplemental wetting, either before or after hand-gun application of 1 million IJs/tree, enhanced nematode-produced mortality. Mortality approached 100% if both pre- and postwetting was used. Larvae in exposed cocoons on apple wood were infected at a higher rate (86%) than those on wood in less exposed positions (73%) or in nonperforated cardboard (72%). Mortality rates for larvae in perforated cardboard were intermediate (77%). Application volumes used to deliver nematodes slightly enhanced infection rate of larvae in some substrates but not others. In one trial, parasitism of codling moth by the wasp Mastrus ridibundus (Ichneumonidae) was negatively correlated with nematode infection of codling moth larvae. Dissections showed that ca. 10% of larvae infected by nematodes had been attacked by the wasp.
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