Journal Article10.1093/JEE/TOX185
Mating Disruption of the Navel Orangeworm (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) Using Widely Spaced, Aerosol Dispensers: Is the Pheromone Blend the Most Efficacious Disruptant?
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Pesticidal natural products - status and future potential.
TL;DR: When integrated into crop production and pest management programs, biopesticides offer the potential for higher crop yields and quality than chemical-only programs, and added benefits include reduction or elimination of chemical residues, therefore easing export.
280
Evaluating insecticide coverage in almond and pistachio for control of navel orangeworm (Amyelois transitella) (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae).
TL;DR: The use of filter paper can provide information for chemical deposition and enable contact toxicity bioassays, whereas water-sensitive paper cannot do this, and the best ground application provided uniform deposition throughout the canopy, whereas the applications by air were most effective in the upper canopy.
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Communication systems
01 Jan 2023
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors describe the methods by which insects initiate and respond to methods of visual communication, acoustical communication, tactile communication, and chemical communication with pheromones.
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Management of Navel Orangeworm (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) Using Four Commercial Mating Disruption Systems in California Almonds.
David R. Haviland,Jhalendra P. Rijal,Stephanie M. Rill,Bradley S. Higbee,Charles S. Burks,Chelsea A Gordon +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, pheromone mating disruption (MD) targeting navel orangeworms is proposed to improve management of California almonds, and the results suggest that adding MD to an existing Navel Worm management program is a cost-effective way to reduce damage while promoting sustainable pest management practices.
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X-Ray-Based Irradiation of Larvae and Pupae of the Navel Orangeworm (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae).
Ronald P. Haff,Inna Ovchinnikova,Pei-Shih Liang,Noreen Mahoney,Wai S. Gee,Joseph Gomez,Natsuko Toyofuku,Eric Jackson,Robert Hnasko,Douglas M. Light +9 more
TL;DR: Results are consistent with reported results for gamma irradiation of NOW larvae where sterility was observed somewhere between the 30 Gy and 60 Gy data points, but mortality was high, and supports the hypothesis that x-ray and gamma treatments are biologically equivalent at equal doses.
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References
CONTROL OF MOTH PESTS BY MATING DISRUPTION: Successes and Constraints
Ring T. Cardé,A. K. Minks +1 more
TL;DR: The efficacy of this technology is related principally to the motility of mated females into the area to be managed, the initial population levels of the pest, and the release characteristics of the formulation.
696
Mechanisms of communication disruption by pheromone in the control of Lepidoptera: a review
TL;DR: Five possible mechanisms involved in the disruption of phero‐mone‐mediated behaviour in the control of lepidopterous pests are discussed and the various techniques used in the field, laboratory investigations, and possible limitations in the application of such studies are reviewed.
168
Mating Disruption for the 21st Century: Matching Technology with Mechanism
James R. Miller,Larry J. Gut +1 more
TL;DR: It is made the case that understanding of mating disruption and optimization of particular formulations can be significantly advanced by rigorous application of the principles of strong inference and how economic optimizations may be achieved once the principal and contributory causes of disruption are proven.
159
Disruption of pheromone communication in moths: is the natural blend really most efficacious?
A.K. Minks,R.T. Carde +1 more
TL;DR: The authors discuss the importance of comparing the relative effectiveness of complete and incomplete pheromone blends when evaluating the potential of mating disruption for controlling pest moths.
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