Following the outbreak: preliminary findings on the landscape effect on Dasineura oleae and its parasitoids in Central Italy
Abstract Dasineura oleae (Angelini, 1831) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), the olive leaf gall midge, is a pest of olive crops that has never been problematic in Italy since 2016, when a massive infestation of this pest was reported in a small region of Central Italy. We selected infested olive orchards through farmers’ reports aiming at quantifying the pest infestation level and the parasitism rate in each site. Also, we aimed at exploring the landscape effect in both pest and parasitoids, using proportion of olive crops and semi-natural habitats, as well as the Shannon index as a measurement of the landscape diversity, estimated at four different scales (250m, 500m, 750m and 1000m buffers around the sampling points). Results showed different landscape effect depending on the organism and on the scale. We underlined a small-scale effect on the parasitism rate and a large-scale effect on the olive leaf midge mediated by the Shannon Index. Moreover, some preliminary results showed that the parasitism rate was high in sites where plants associated with D. oleae parasitoids were present in the adjacent semi-natural habitat. Further study should deepen and validate our findings on the effect of landscape and of the vegetation on natural enemies of D.oleae. These results should stimulate new approaches in the studying of the olive gall leaf midge as well as new suppression strategies.