Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)

Fruit flies are pests of economic importance inWest Africa due to their quarantine status and losses recorded in fruits and vegetables. Before the introduction of exotic species of parasitoids against any exotic fruit fly species, it is fundamental to first determine the presence and monitor the nat...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vayssières, Jean-François, Adandonon, A., N'Diaye, O., Sinzogan, A.A.C., Kooymann, C., Badji, K., Rey, J., Wharton, R.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Entomological Society of Southern Africa 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80864
_version_ 1855521507809165312
author Vayssières, Jean-François
Adandonon, A.
N'Diaye, O.
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Kooymann, C.
Badji, K.
Rey, J.
Wharton, R.
author_browse Adandonon, A.
Badji, K.
Kooymann, C.
N'Diaye, O.
Rey, J.
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Vayssières, Jean-François
Wharton, R.
author_facet Vayssières, Jean-François
Adandonon, A.
N'Diaye, O.
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Kooymann, C.
Badji, K.
Rey, J.
Wharton, R.
author_sort Vayssières, Jean-François
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Fruit flies are pests of economic importance inWest Africa due to their quarantine status and losses recorded in fruits and vegetables. Before the introduction of exotic species of parasitoids against any exotic fruit fly species, it is fundamental to first determine the presence and monitor the native parasitoid species.This work was carried out in Casamance (Senegal), during the rainy season of 2010, with sampling of 5191 fruits from 22 plant species. Seven species of parasitoids (all Braconidae) were recorded and reared from six fruit species. The parasitoids included Fopius caudatus (Szépligeti), F. silvestrii (Wharton), F. desideratus (Bridwell), Diachasmimorpha fullawayi (Silvestri), D. carinata (Szépligeti), Psyttalia cosyrae (Wilkinson) and P. concolor (Szépligeti). The most abundant species was F. caudatus (63.97 %). The overall mean parasitism rate observed in all samples was 2.4 ± 1.3 %. Ceratitis cosyra (Walker) (77 %) was the host fly most commonly reared from fruits yielding parasitoids including F. caudatus. Annona senegalensis Pers. was the fruit species most frequently infested by fruit flies and Saba comorensis (Boj. ex DC) Pichon fruits had the highest parasitism rates. In the current work, there were no parasitoids reared from the recently introduced pest, Bactrocera invadens Drew, Tsuruta and White. This is the first report of all these reared parasitoids, except D. fullawayi, in Senegal.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace80864
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateRange 2012
publishDateSort 2012
publisher Entomological Society of Southern Africa
publisherStr Entomological Society of Southern Africa
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace808642025-12-08T09:54:28Z Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal) Vayssières, Jean-François Adandonon, A. N'Diaye, O. Sinzogan, A.A.C. Kooymann, C. Badji, K. Rey, J. Wharton, R. biological control bactrocera tephritidae braconidae fruit flies Fruit flies are pests of economic importance inWest Africa due to their quarantine status and losses recorded in fruits and vegetables. Before the introduction of exotic species of parasitoids against any exotic fruit fly species, it is fundamental to first determine the presence and monitor the native parasitoid species.This work was carried out in Casamance (Senegal), during the rainy season of 2010, with sampling of 5191 fruits from 22 plant species. Seven species of parasitoids (all Braconidae) were recorded and reared from six fruit species. The parasitoids included Fopius caudatus (Szépligeti), F. silvestrii (Wharton), F. desideratus (Bridwell), Diachasmimorpha fullawayi (Silvestri), D. carinata (Szépligeti), Psyttalia cosyrae (Wilkinson) and P. concolor (Szépligeti). The most abundant species was F. caudatus (63.97 %). The overall mean parasitism rate observed in all samples was 2.4 ± 1.3 %. Ceratitis cosyra (Walker) (77 %) was the host fly most commonly reared from fruits yielding parasitoids including F. caudatus. Annona senegalensis Pers. was the fruit species most frequently infested by fruit flies and Saba comorensis (Boj. ex DC) Pichon fruits had the highest parasitism rates. In the current work, there were no parasitoids reared from the recently introduced pest, Bactrocera invadens Drew, Tsuruta and White. This is the first report of all these reared parasitoids, except D. fullawayi, in Senegal. 2012-09 2017-05-03T08:45:46Z 2017-05-03T08:45:46Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80864 en Limited Access Entomological Society of Southern Africa Vayssières, J., Adandonon, A., N'Diaye, O., Sinzogan, A., Kooymann, C., Badji, K., ... & Wharton, R. (2012). Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance, Senegal. African Entomology, 20(2), 308-315.
spellingShingle biological control
bactrocera
tephritidae
braconidae
fruit flies
Vayssières, Jean-François
Adandonon, A.
N'Diaye, O.
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Kooymann, C.
Badji, K.
Rey, J.
Wharton, R.
Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)
title Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)
title_full Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)
title_fullStr Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)
title_full_unstemmed Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)
title_short Native parasitoids associated with fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated and wild fruit crops in Casamance (Senegal)
title_sort native parasitoids associated with fruit flies diptera tephritidae in cultivated and wild fruit crops in casamance senegal
topic biological control
bactrocera
tephritidae
braconidae
fruit flies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80864
work_keys_str_mv AT vayssieresjeanfrancois nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT adandonona nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT ndiayeo nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT sinzoganaac nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT kooymannc nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT badjik nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT reyj nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal
AT whartonr nativeparasitoidsassociatedwithfruitfliesdipteratephritidaeincultivatedandwildfruitcropsincasamancesenegal