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Título : | PRE-RELEASE RESEARCH ON BIOCONTROL AGENTS FOR CHROMOLAENA IN SOUTH AFRICA |
Autor : | Zachariades, Costas Strathie, Lorraine Delgado, Oona Retief, Estianne |
Palabras clave : | stem-attacking insects climate matching host biotype matching |
Fecha de publicación : | Sep-2016 |
Editorial : | National Pingtung University of Science and Technology (NPUST), Taiwan |
Resumen : | With the establishment of two leaf-feeding agents on Chromolaena odorata in South Africa,
some success in biocontrol of the weed has been achieved, but there is a need for additional
agents. Current research is focused largely on stem-attacking insects. The two broad groups that
have been targeted are (i) candidate agents which originate from the region of the Americas in
which plants resembling the biotype of C. odorata invading southern Africa are present, and (ii)
those which originate in regions which have a similar climate to the area in southern Africa
invaded by C. odorata and which have a biology allowing them to withstand a prolonged dry
season and/or fires. Promising agents in South African quarantine at present include a stem-tip
galler, Dichrorampha n.sp. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), a stem-tip wilter Carmenta n.sp.
(Lepidoptera: Sesiidae) and a stem borer Recchia parvula (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Field
host-range surveys that have been carried out on three species, viz. the stem galler Conotrachelus
reticulatus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), Carmenta n.sp. and the root feeder Longitarsus
sp.(Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), and which are under way for a fourth, the stem-tip wilter
Melanagromyza eupatoriella (Diptera: Agromyzidae), in the neotropics have proved valuable.
Longitarsus sp. was rejected as a biocontrol agent due to an unacceptably wide host range, while
the stem tip galler Mescinia n.sp (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) and the stem galler Polymorphomyia
basilica (Diptera: Tephritidae) were reduced in priority status due to rearing difficulties and the
prioritization of more promising agents. Potential pathogens collected from C. odorata in Jamaica did not perform well in quarantine, but trap plants to be planted in Jamaica may attract
compatible fungi. |
URI : | http://hdl.handle.net/10872/23644 |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos Publicados
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