The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana

Pests and diseases are major determinants of cocoa yield, but continuous synthetic chemical control of cocoa pests contributes to environmental pollution and high production costs. As an alternative, we assessed the influence of eight commonly retained forest tree species on mirid and black pod dise...

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Main Authors: Asitoakor, B.K., Raebild, A., Asare, R., Vaast, P., Howe, A.G., Eziah, V.Y., Owusu, K., Mensah, E.O., Kotey, A., Ravn, H.P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159519
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author Asitoakor, B.K.
Raebild, A.
Asare, R.
Vaast, P.
Howe, A.G.
Eziah, V.Y.
Owusu, K.
Mensah, E.O.
Kotey, A.
Ravn, H.P.
author_browse Asare, R.
Asitoakor, B.K.
Eziah, V.Y.
Howe, A.G.
Kotey, A.
Mensah, E.O.
Owusu, K.
Raebild, A.
Ravn, H.P.
Vaast, P.
author_facet Asitoakor, B.K.
Raebild, A.
Asare, R.
Vaast, P.
Howe, A.G.
Eziah, V.Y.
Owusu, K.
Mensah, E.O.
Kotey, A.
Ravn, H.P.
author_sort Asitoakor, B.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Pests and diseases are major determinants of cocoa yield, but continuous synthetic chemical control of cocoa pests contributes to environmental pollution and high production costs. As an alternative, we assessed the influence of eight commonly retained forest tree species on mirid and black pod disease infestation, compared to unshaded portions in 10 cocoa fields in the Western region of Ghana. The influence of tree species, on-farm temperature, rainfall, and relative air humidity was assessed on mirid population densities on cocoa trees, and mirid and black pod disease infested pods from May 2018 to December 2020. Shade tree species had significant effects on mirid densities and resulting pod damages, with highest mirid occurrence in Triplochiton scleroxylon K. Schum (0.51 ± 0.12 mirids tree−1 yr−1) and lowest occurrence in Khaya ivorensis A. Chem (0.21 ± 0.07 mirids tree−1 yr−1), Cedrela odorata L. (0.22 ± 0.09 mirids tree−1 yr−1) and Milicia excelsa (Welw.) C. Berg. (0.24 ± 0.09 mirids tree−1 yr−1) plots, compared to the unshaded control plots (0.48 ± 0.12 mirids tree−1 yr−1). Black pod disease (caused by Phytophthora spp.) infection was significantly different among species with highest pod damage observed around Cola nitida Schott and Endl. and least in unshaded areas. The occurrence of black pod disease varied with seasons and correlated with monthly rainfall and humidity, while mirid infestation correlated with monthly temperature. The diameter of shade trees and the density of cocoa trees influenced both mirid infestation and black pod disease infection. Hence, careful selection of shade tree species appears to be an important strategy to enhance integrated pest management (IPM) in cocoa systems.
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spelling CGSpace1595192025-12-08T09:54:28Z The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana Asitoakor, B.K. Raebild, A. Asare, R. Vaast, P. Howe, A.G. Eziah, V.Y. Owusu, K. Mensah, E.O. Kotey, A. Ravn, H.P. Cocoa canopy climate change integrated pest management smallholder farmers west africa Pests and diseases are major determinants of cocoa yield, but continuous synthetic chemical control of cocoa pests contributes to environmental pollution and high production costs. As an alternative, we assessed the influence of eight commonly retained forest tree species on mirid and black pod disease infestation, compared to unshaded portions in 10 cocoa fields in the Western region of Ghana. The influence of tree species, on-farm temperature, rainfall, and relative air humidity was assessed on mirid population densities on cocoa trees, and mirid and black pod disease infested pods from May 2018 to December 2020. Shade tree species had significant effects on mirid densities and resulting pod damages, with highest mirid occurrence in Triplochiton scleroxylon K. Schum (0.51 ± 0.12 mirids tree−1 yr−1) and lowest occurrence in Khaya ivorensis A. Chem (0.21 ± 0.07 mirids tree−1 yr−1), Cedrela odorata L. (0.22 ± 0.09 mirids tree−1 yr−1) and Milicia excelsa (Welw.) C. Berg. (0.24 ± 0.09 mirids tree−1 yr−1) plots, compared to the unshaded control plots (0.48 ± 0.12 mirids tree−1 yr−1). Black pod disease (caused by Phytophthora spp.) infection was significantly different among species with highest pod damage observed around Cola nitida Schott and Endl. and least in unshaded areas. The occurrence of black pod disease varied with seasons and correlated with monthly rainfall and humidity, while mirid infestation correlated with monthly temperature. The diameter of shade trees and the density of cocoa trees influenced both mirid infestation and black pod disease infection. Hence, careful selection of shade tree species appears to be an important strategy to enhance integrated pest management (IPM) in cocoa systems. 2024-10 2024-11-11T14:29:46Z 2024-11-11T14:29:46Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159519 en Open Access application/pdf Elsevier Asitoakor, B.K., Ræbild, A., Asare, R., Vaast, P., Howe, A.G., Eziah, V.Y., ... & Ravn, H.P. (2024). The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana. Crop Protection, 184: 106810, 1-10.
spellingShingle Cocoa
canopy
climate change
integrated pest management
smallholder farmers
west africa
Asitoakor, B.K.
Raebild, A.
Asare, R.
Vaast, P.
Howe, A.G.
Eziah, V.Y.
Owusu, K.
Mensah, E.O.
Kotey, A.
Ravn, H.P.
The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana
title The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana
title_full The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana
title_fullStr The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana
title_short The potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in Ghana
title_sort potential of selected shade tree species for managing mirids and black pod disease infection in cocoa agroforestry systems in ghana
topic Cocoa
canopy
climate change
integrated pest management
smallholder farmers
west africa
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159519
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