Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies

Mite fauna associated with Amaranthus cruentus L. and Solanum macrocarpon L., two major indigenous leafy vegetables produced in Benin, was monitored in July-October 2004, on IITA-Benin Station where no pesticides were applied and on a farmer-managed vegetable farm near Abomey-Calavi with pesticide a...

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Autores principales: Adango, E., Onzo, A., Hanna, R., Atachi, P., James, B.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Society for Horticultural Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92220
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author Adango, E.
Onzo, A.
Hanna, R.
Atachi, P.
James, B.
author_browse Adango, E.
Atachi, P.
Hanna, R.
James, B.
Onzo, A.
author_facet Adango, E.
Onzo, A.
Hanna, R.
Atachi, P.
James, B.
author_sort Adango, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Mite fauna associated with Amaranthus cruentus L. and Solanum macrocarpon L., two major indigenous leafy vegetables produced in Benin, was monitored in July-October 2004, on IITA-Benin Station where no pesticides were applied and on a farmer-managed vegetable farm near Abomey-Calavi with pesticide applications on nearby plots. The major phytophagous mites Tetranychus urticae Koch and T. ludeni Zacher (Tetranychidae), were present on both vegetables with relatively higher abundance on S. macrocarpon than on A. cruentus. Polyphagotarsonemus latus Banks (Tarsonemidae) present only on S. macrocarpon. P. latus was the most dominant mite pest with remarkably higher impact in the environment where broad spectrum pesticides are used. Predatory mites found belonged to the family Phytoseiidae. Contrary to P. latus, predators were more abundant in the environment without pesticide and this certainly explains the lower mite pest abundance at IITA than on the farmer-managed farm, thereby pointing at the potential of indigenous phytoseiid species in controlling P. latus. Additionally, we investigated the effects of the two plants on the development and demographic parameters of T. ludeni, a less studied mite pest. The experiments were conducted at IITA-Benin in a growth chamber at 27°C, 70% ± 10% RH and 12:12 (L:D). Comparison of demographic parameters of T. ludeni on the two plants suggests that T. ludeni performs better on S. macrocarpon than on A. cruentus, explaining its lower abundance on the later. Future studies should focus on the reasons for the lower population growth on amaranth as this finding could be used in IPM strategies (e.g. intercropping), to reduce pest density, and in developing biopesticides against major vegetable mite pests in Africa. Testing cultivars resistance and the efficiency of indigenous predator species together with searching for efficient exotic predators for introduction against vegetable mite pests in Africa should be encouraged.
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spelling CGSpace922202025-12-08T09:54:28Z Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies Adango, E. Onzo, A. Hanna, R. Atachi, P. James, B. tarsonemidae polyphagotarsonemus latus tetranychidae tranychus urticae t. ludeni phytoseiidae pesticide predators Mite fauna associated with Amaranthus cruentus L. and Solanum macrocarpon L., two major indigenous leafy vegetables produced in Benin, was monitored in July-October 2004, on IITA-Benin Station where no pesticides were applied and on a farmer-managed vegetable farm near Abomey-Calavi with pesticide applications on nearby plots. The major phytophagous mites Tetranychus urticae Koch and T. ludeni Zacher (Tetranychidae), were present on both vegetables with relatively higher abundance on S. macrocarpon than on A. cruentus. Polyphagotarsonemus latus Banks (Tarsonemidae) present only on S. macrocarpon. P. latus was the most dominant mite pest with remarkably higher impact in the environment where broad spectrum pesticides are used. Predatory mites found belonged to the family Phytoseiidae. Contrary to P. latus, predators were more abundant in the environment without pesticide and this certainly explains the lower mite pest abundance at IITA than on the farmer-managed farm, thereby pointing at the potential of indigenous phytoseiid species in controlling P. latus. Additionally, we investigated the effects of the two plants on the development and demographic parameters of T. ludeni, a less studied mite pest. The experiments were conducted at IITA-Benin in a growth chamber at 27°C, 70% ± 10% RH and 12:12 (L:D). Comparison of demographic parameters of T. ludeni on the two plants suggests that T. ludeni performs better on S. macrocarpon than on A. cruentus, explaining its lower abundance on the later. Future studies should focus on the reasons for the lower population growth on amaranth as this finding could be used in IPM strategies (e.g. intercropping), to reduce pest density, and in developing biopesticides against major vegetable mite pests in Africa. Testing cultivars resistance and the efficiency of indigenous predator species together with searching for efficient exotic predators for introduction against vegetable mite pests in Africa should be encouraged. 2007-09 2018-04-24T08:40:16Z 2018-04-24T08:40:16Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92220 en Limited Access International Society for Horticultural Science Adango, E., Onzo, A., Hanna, R., Atachi, P. & James, B. (2007). Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies. Acta Horticulturae, 752, 311-318.
spellingShingle tarsonemidae
polyphagotarsonemus latus
tetranychidae
tranychus urticae
t. ludeni
phytoseiidae
pesticide
predators
Adango, E.
Onzo, A.
Hanna, R.
Atachi, P.
James, B.
Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies
title Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies
title_full Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies
title_fullStr Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies
title_full_unstemmed Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies
title_short Mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in Benin: the search for appropriate control strategies
title_sort mite pests of major importance on indigenous leafy vegetables in benin the search for appropriate control strategies
topic tarsonemidae
polyphagotarsonemus latus
tetranychidae
tranychus urticae
t. ludeni
phytoseiidae
pesticide
predators
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92220
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