scholarly journals Detected of Pest İnsect Species on Pomegranate Areas in Adıyaman and Siirt Provinces

Author(s):  
Murat GÜLMEZ ◽  
Asime Filiz ÇALIŞKAN KEÇE ◽  
Mehmet KAPLAN ◽  
Mehmet Rifat ULUSOY
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Cerritos Flores ◽  
R. Ponce-Reyes ◽  
F. Rojas-García

Insect species, especially those considered to be pests, can be exploited for human consumption. One of the most devastating pest insect species in central Mexico is the grasshopper Sphenarium purpurascens. Here we develop a sustainable exploitation strategy that produces a considerable biomass of S. purpurascens while minimising the damage they cause to agricultural fields by changing the chemical control methods to a mechanical method. In this model the biomass-per-stage of grasshoppers that can be extracted annually using the mechanical method was calculated and their potential abundance was estimated using Maxent. With a calculated population density of 10-55 individuals of S. purpurascens per m2 over approximately 1,050,000 ha of the agroecosystems in Mexico, the estimated biomass of this insect averaged 350,000 tons per year (generating a gross income of US$ 3.5×108 million). Unlike chemical control methods, mechanical control has no toxic effects on human populations or other species inside or outside of the agroecosystems. Promoting a change from chemical to mechanical control methods of pest species could greatly impact on the health of millions of people globally and on the environment, reducing carbon dioxide and methane emissions, land clearing and the use of pesticides while obtaining economic profit.


2016 ◽  
Vol 93 (4) ◽  
pp. 190-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zahra Afrasiabi ◽  
Holly J.R. Popham ◽  
David Stanley ◽  
Dhananjay Suresh ◽  
Kristen Finley ◽  
...  

AGRICA ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-28
Author(s):  
Yustina Maria Silvia Wonga Puu ◽  
Samuel Pakan ◽  
Lince Makkun

This research was conducted at pest and plant disease laboratory,  faculty of agriculture Nusa Cendana University in Kupang. Corn sample is taken from fanner in Amarasi, Kupang Timur, Kupang Barat and from the trader in Oesapa, Oesao, Penfui. This research intends to inventory pest after yields corn and to know the damage level of corn in farmer and trader. This research used a 32 kg corn sample for quotation methods. The observed variable is pest insect species, imago population, damage seed percentage, Weight decrease percentage,  water level, temperature and moisturizer. Pest insect population and species observed on 1 kg corn. While seed damage and weight decrease per cent on 100 g corn seed and 5 g for water level. Data result tabulated and descriptively analyzed. The result of the research showed 1 pest insect species in the farmer corn storage is S.zeanmys and 2 species in trader corn storage is S.zeanmys and T confusum. Highest population S.zeamays founded in Penfui trader by 50,50/kg and lowest population 4,50/kg in farmer at Amarasi. T.confusum population only founded in trader not in farmer level. Highest population 2,17/kg in Penfui trader and lowest 0,17/kg in Oesapa trader. While highest seed damage percentage founded in Penfui trader by 11,13% and  lowest  1,22% in farmer at Amarasi and highest weight decrease percentage founded in Oesapa trade by 0,77% and lowest 0,25% in farmer at Kupang Barat  


Author(s):  
Nguyen Van Hieu ◽  
Nguyen Van Vinh

An intensive field survey on aquatic insects of Me Linh Station for Biodiversity in Vinhphuc province was conducted in December 2015. Specimens were collected at 8 different sites and aquatic insects were collected both quantitatively by Surber net and qualitatively by hand net, pond net. As a result, a total of 110 aquatic insect species belonging to 98 genera, 49 families and 9 orders were recognized. Among these, the order Ephemeroptera had the highest species number with 26 species, followed by Odonata with 25 species, Trichoptera with 18 species, Coleoptera with 15 species, Hemiptera with 11 species, Diptera with 9 species. Lepidoptera, Plecoptera and Megaloptera had the lowest of species number, represented by 3 species of Lepidoptera, 2 species of Plecoptera and 1 species of Megaloptera. Besides, the quantitative analysis results and the functional feeding groups were provided.


2005 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 140-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.R. McNeill ◽  
C.J. Fletcher

Nodding thistle receptacle weevil Rhinocyllus conicus and gallfly Urophora solstitialis attack the capitula of nodding thistle Carduus nutans L Between 31 October and 15 December 2003 the phenology of both R conicus and U solstitialis was studied at a dryland site in Canterbury Adult R conicus were more numerous than U solstitialis on capitula throughout the experiment Larvae of R conicus were first found on 11 November (15 of capitula infested) and peaked on 2 December with 53 of capitula infested Only 3 of capitula were infested by U solstitialis Adult R conicus or U solstitialis emerged from 79 of the selected primary and secondary capitula The majority of infested capitula (81) contained only R conicus 2 contained only U solstitialis while 17 contained both insect species Parasitism of R conicus by the braconid parasitoid Microctonus aethiopoides was low and occurred when most weevil eggs had been laid


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-299
Author(s):  
Javier Carreño-Barrera ◽  
Luis Alberto Núñez-Avellaneda ◽  
Maria José Sanín ◽  
Artur Campos D. Maia

Solitary, dioecious, and mostly endemic to Andean cloud forests, wax palms (Ceroxylon Bonpl. ex DC. spp.) are currently under worrisome conservation status. The establishment of management plans for their dwindling populations rely on detailed biological data, including their reproductive ecology. As in the case of numerous other Neotropical palm taxa, small beetles are assumed to be selective pollinators of wax palms, but their identity and relevance in successful fruit yield were unknown. During three consecutive reproductive seasons we collected data on population phenology and reproductive and floral biology of three syntopic species of wax palms native to the Colombian Andes. We also determined the composition of the associated flower-visiting entomofauna, quantifying the extent of the role of individual species as effective pollinators through standardized value indexes that take into consideration abundance, constancy, and pollen transport efficiency. The studied populations of C. parvifrons (Engel) H. Wendl., C. ventricosum Burret, and C. vogelianum (Engel) H. Wendl. exhibit seasonal reproductive cycles with marked temporal patterns of flower and fruit production. The composition of the associated flower-visiting entomofauna, comprised by ca. 50 morphotypes, was constant across flowering seasons and differed only marginally among species. Nonetheless, a fraction of the insect species associated with pistillate inflorescences actually carried pollen, and calculated pollinator importance indexes demonstrated that one insect species alone, Mystrops rotundula Sharp, accounted for 94%–99% of the effective pollination services for all three species of wax palms. The sequential asynchronous flowering of C. parvifrons, C. ventricosum, and C. vogelianum provides an abundant and constant supply of pollen, pivotal for the maintenance of large populations of their shared pollinators, a cooperative strategy proven effective by high fruit yield rates (up to 79%). Reproductive success might be compromised for all species by the population decline of one of them, as it would tamper with the temporal orchestration of pollen offer.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (Special) ◽  
pp. 143-155
Author(s):  
SD Mohapatra ◽  
R Tripathi ◽  
Anjani Kumar ◽  
Suchismita Kar ◽  
Minati Mohapatra ◽  
...  

The insect problem is accentuated in intensive rice cropping where the insects occur throughout the year in overlapping generations. Over 800 insect species damaging rice in one way or another, although the majority of them do very little damage. In India, about a dozen of insect species are of major importance but the economic damage caused by these species varies greatly from field to field and from year to year. Insect pests cause about 10-15 per cent yield losses. Farmers lose an estimated average of 37% of their rice crop to insect pests and diseases every year. This review focuses on precision farming tools being used in rice pest and diseases management viz., forecasting model for real-time pest-advisory services, hyper-spectral remote sensing in pest damage assessment, computer-based decision support system, disruptive technologies (mobile apps).


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