| Literature DB >> 22645483 |
Françoise Briand1, Patrick M Guerin, Pierre-Joseph Charmillot, Patrik Kehrli.
Abstract
Mating disruption by sex pheromones is a sustainable, effective and widely used pest management scheme. A drawback of this technique is its challenging assessment of effectiveness in the field (e.g., spatial scale, pest density). The aim of this work was to facilitate the evaluation of field-deployed pheromone dispensers. We tested the suitability of small insect field cages for a pre-evaluation of the impact of sex pheromones on mating using the grape moths Eupoecilia ambiguella and Lobesia botrana, two major pests in vineyards. Cages consisted of a cubic metal frame of 35 cm sides, which was covered with a mosquito net of 1500 μm mesh size. Cages were installed in the centre of pheromone-treated and untreated vineyards. In several trials, 1 to 20 couples of grape moths per cage were released for one to three nights. The proportion of mated females was between 15 to 70% lower in pheromone-treated compared to untreated vineyards. Overall, the exposure of eight couples for one night was adequate for comparing different control schemes. Small cages may therefore provide a fast and cheap method to compare the effectiveness of pheromone dispensers under standardised semi-field conditions and may help predict the value of setting-up large-scale field trials.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22645483 PMCID: PMC3356754 DOI: 10.1100/2012/960468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1Percentage of mated (a) L. botrana and (b) E. ambiguella females in field cages (mesh size = 800 μm) containing a pheromone dispenser. The notation μg/day represents the approximate daily emission rate of pheromone dispensers for (a) L. botrana and (b) E. ambiguella. Pest control schemes with different letters are significantly different (P < 0.05); data are untransformed; bars = 1 SE.
Figure 2Percentage of mated (a) L. botrana and (b) E. ambiguella females in field cages (mesh size = 1500 μm) containing no pheromone dispenser. The notation μg/day represents approximately the daily emission rate of pheromone dispensers for (a) L. botrana and (b) E. ambiguella. Pest control schemes with different letters are significantly different (P < 0.01); data are untransformed; bars = 1 SE.
Figure 3Effect of the duration of insect exposure on the percentage of E. ambiguella females mated in field cages (mesh size = 1500 μm, containing no pheromone dispenser). The notation μg/day represents the approximate daily emission rate of pheromone dispensers for E. ambiguella; data are untransformed; bars = 1 SE.
ANCOVA table on the effect of date of exposure, number of exposed couples, and mating disruption control scheme on the mating status of E. ambiguella females.
| Source of variance | df | Sum of Sq |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date of exposure | 3 | 0.20 | 2.26 | 0.090 |
| Number of exposed couples (=NEC) | 1 | 0.87 | 29.37 | <0.001 |
| Pest control scheme (=PCS) | 2 | 4.20 | 70.19 | <0.001 |
| NEC*PCS | 2 | 0.31 | 5.17 | 0.008 |
| Error | 63 | 1.88 |
Figure 4Effect of the number of couples exposed on the percentage of E. ambiguella females mated in field cages (mesh size = 1500 μm, containing no pheromone dispenser). The notation μg/day represents the approximate daily emission rate of pheromone dispensers for E. ambiguella; data from the three insect control schemes were fitted with linear regression models.