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Evaluation of a Push-Pull Strategy for Spotted-Wing Drosophila Management in Highbush Blueberry.

Cody C GaleBeth FergusonCesar R Rodriguez-SaonaVonnie D C ShieldsAijun Zhang
Published in: Insects (2024)
We evaluated a novel push-pull control strategy for protecting highbush blueberry, Vaccinium corymbosum , against spotted-wing drosophila (SWD), Drosophila suzukii . Methyl benzoate (MB) was used as the pushing agent and a previously tested SWD attractive blend of lure-scents was used as the pulling agent. MB dispensers (push) were hung in the canopy and lure-scent dispensers (pull) were hung in yellow jacket traps filled with soapy water around the blueberry bushes. Blueberries were sampled weekly, and any infestation was inspected by examining the breathing tubes of SWD eggs which protrude through the skin of infested fruit. The frequency of infestation, i.e., the proportion of berries infested with at least one egg, and the extent of infestation, i.e., the mean number of eggs in infested berries, were significantly reduced in treatments receiving MB dispensers as a pushing agent when infestation rates were very high. However, the mass trapping devices as a pulling agent did not provide comparable protection on their own and did not produce additive protection when used in combination with the MB dispensers in push-pull trials. We conclude that MB has the potential to be implemented as a spatial repellent/oviposition deterrent to reduce SWD damage in blueberry under field conditions and does not require the SWD attractant as a pulling agent to achieve crop protection.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • climate change
  • risk assessment