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Improved quality management to enhance the efficacy of the sterile insect technique for lepidopteran pests
Authors:G S Simmons  D M Suckling  J E Carpenter  M F Addison  V A Dyck  M J B Vreysen
Institution:1. USDA/APHIS/PPQ/CPHST, Moss Landing, CA, USA;2. The Plant & Food Research Institute of New Zealand, Lincoln, New Zealand;3. USDA/ARS/CPMRU, Tifton, GA, USA;4. University of Stellenbosch, Stellenbosch, South Africa;5. Breitenfurter Strasse, Vienna, Austria;6. Joint FAO/IAEA Programme, Entomology Unit, FAO/IAEA Agriculture & Biotechnology Laboratory, International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria
Abstract:Lepidoptera are among the most severe pests of food and fibre crops in the world and are mainly controlled using broad spectrum insecticides. This does not lead to environmentally sustainable control and farmers are demanding alternative control tools which are both effective and friendly to the environment. The sterile insect technique (SIT), within an area‐wide integrated pest management (AW‐IPM) approach, has proven to be a powerful control tactic for the creation of pest‐free areas or areas of low pest prevalence. Improving the quality of laboratory‐reared moths would increase the efficacy of released sterile moths applied in AW‐IPM programmes that integrate the (SIT). Factors that might affect the quality and field performance of released sterile moths are identified and characterized in this study. Some tools and methods to measure, predict and enhance moth quality are described such as tests for moth quality, female moth trapping systems, ‘smart’ traps, machine vision for recording behaviour, marking techniques, and release technologies. Methods of enhancing rearing systems are discussed with a view to selecting and preserving useful genetic traits that improve field performance.
Keywords:Area‐wide integrated pest management  field performance  Lepidoptera  quality control
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