CABBAGE SEEDPOD WEEVIL (CEUTORHYNCHUS-ASSIMILIS, PAYKULL) MANAGEMENT BY TRAP CROPPING AND ITS EFFECT ON PARASITISM BY TRICHOMALUS-PERFECTUS(WALKER) IN OILSEED RAPE

Authors
Citation
Gd. Buntin, CABBAGE SEEDPOD WEEVIL (CEUTORHYNCHUS-ASSIMILIS, PAYKULL) MANAGEMENT BY TRAP CROPPING AND ITS EFFECT ON PARASITISM BY TRICHOMALUS-PERFECTUS(WALKER) IN OILSEED RAPE, Crop protection, 17(4), 1998, pp. 299-305
Citations number
20
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture
Journal title
ISSN journal
02612194
Volume
17
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
299 - 305
Database
ISI
SICI code
0261-2194(1998)17:4<299:CSW(PM>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
The feasibility of managing the cabbage seedpod weevil (Ceutorhynchus assimilis, Paykull) in winter oilseed rape (Brassica napus, L.) using an early-flowering trap crop was studied during four seasons near Grif fin, GA. USA. The trap crop consisted of an autumn-planted winter type variety with an autumn-planted spring type variety of B. napus which flowered two to three weeks before the main crop. The trap crop system was compared to conventional winter oilseed rape production without i nsecticidal control or with control of C. assimilis using esfenvalerat e. The conventional control treatment greatly reduced adult numbers du ring flowering and larval pod infestations in all years and prevented losses of grain yield in two years and of grain quality in three of th e four years. The trap crop treatment reduced adult numbers during flo wering by about 60% in 1994 and 80% in 1995, and it reduced larval inf estations in pods by 60% in 1995, but not in the other three years. Tr ap cropping also did not prevent significant losses in grain yield in any year. Greater than 96% of the larval parasitoids recovered from C. assimilis were Trichomalus perfectus (Walker). The conventional use o f esfenvalerate during bloom indirectly reduced T.: perfectus numbers because of a reduction in the number of available hosts, but the paras itoid typically attacked a greater proportion of remaining host larvae . The trap crop treatment did not adversely affect parasitism of C. as similis by T.: perfectus, but did not reliably control C. assimilis da mage in autumn-sown oilseed rape. A trap crop system may be effective with lower populations of C. assimilis, but to be feasible in the USA, effective C. assimilis adulticides such as esfenvalerate must be regi stered for use on oilseed rape. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rig hts reserved.