Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9474849 Journal of Stored Products Research 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The control of the development of Callosobruchus maculatus was studied using a method that combined exposure to essential oil extracted from Cymbopogon schoenanthus and the introduction of a pteromalid natural enemy of the bruchid, Dinarmus basalis. The effect of the essential oil used was evaluated on all developmental stages of C. maculatus and on adults of D. basalis. At the highest concentration tested (33.3 μl/l) all adults of C. maculatus were killed within 24 h of exposure to the oil and the development of newly laid eggs and neonate larvae was also inhibited. However, the oil had variable efficacy against the bruchid instars developing inside the seeds: 5-day-old larvae (63% LI and 37% LII) of C. maculatus developing inside the seeds proving to be highly susceptible while 15-day-old insects (84% of pupae and 16% of larvae) were tolerant. Under the same conditions (33.3 μl/l), adults of D. basalis were very susceptible to oil vapours and to the residual activity of the oil after 3 or 6 days. However, the introduction of 10 pairs of adult D. basalis into a jar containing 100 hosts aged 10 days, 3 or 6 days before the oil application, gave respectively an emergence of 26 or 18 adults of the parasitoid compared to 28 in the control and there was no adult emergence of the host. The possibility of an integrated pest management strategy by using allelochemicals such as essential oils and indigenous natural enemies to control C. maculatus development in cowpea stocks is discussed.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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