Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna

Despite the fact that persimmon cultivation has been traditionally considered a minor crop in Spain, in recent years this crop has experienced an important increase in both cultivated area and production. This increase has been mainly attributed to the generalized adoption of a new postharvest treat...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: García-Martínez, Omar, Ferragut, Francisco, Beitia, Francisco J., Urbaneja, Alberto, Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell
Formato: article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6167
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10493-019-00347-7
_version_ 1855032378840317952
author García-Martínez, Omar
Ferragut, Francisco
Beitia, Francisco J.
Urbaneja, Alberto
Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell
author_browse Beitia, Francisco J.
Ferragut, Francisco
García-Martínez, Omar
Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell
Urbaneja, Alberto
author_facet García-Martínez, Omar
Ferragut, Francisco
Beitia, Francisco J.
Urbaneja, Alberto
Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell
author_sort García-Martínez, Omar
collection ReDivia
description Despite the fact that persimmon cultivation has been traditionally considered a minor crop in Spain, in recent years this crop has experienced an important increase in both cultivated area and production. This increase has been mainly attributed to the generalized adoption of a new postharvest treatment which allows the considerable extension of the fruit commercialization period. The sudden expansion of this crop has not allowed time to correctly develop an integrated pest management program (IPM). Consequently, chemical treatments have become the main strategy to lessen the impact of pests. Given the importance of phytoseiids in other Mediterranean fruit crops, where they are the basis of IPM, we sought to determine whether they could be similarly employed in persimmon crops. For this, we studied the predatory mite complex, the phytoseiid population dynamics and the potential prey for them during three consecutive seasons in four persimmon orchards. Phytoseiids were abundant throughout the season, found on average at a density of more than 1 predatory mite per leaf. The most abundant species was Euseius stipulatus (57.3%) followed by Typhlodromus phialatus (24.8 %), Amblyseius andersoni (17.1 %) and Paraseiulus talbii (0.8 %). Persimmon leaves provided diverse abundance of prey for predatory mites throughout the year, being mealybugs, coccids, whiteflies and thrips the most common. The abundance of predatory mites was significantly correlated to the abundance of potential prey available. From our results we anticipate that phytoseiids will be key actors in the development of persimmon IPM. Their role and how to conserve their populations in this crop are discussed in this research.
format article
id ReDivia6167
institution Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling ReDivia61672025-04-25T14:46:22Z Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna García-Martínez, Omar Ferragut, Francisco Beitia, Francisco J. Urbaneja, Alberto Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell Euseius stipulatus Typhlodromus phialatus Amblyseius andersoni Paraseiulus talbii H10 Pests of plants Integrated pest management Despite the fact that persimmon cultivation has been traditionally considered a minor crop in Spain, in recent years this crop has experienced an important increase in both cultivated area and production. This increase has been mainly attributed to the generalized adoption of a new postharvest treatment which allows the considerable extension of the fruit commercialization period. The sudden expansion of this crop has not allowed time to correctly develop an integrated pest management program (IPM). Consequently, chemical treatments have become the main strategy to lessen the impact of pests. Given the importance of phytoseiids in other Mediterranean fruit crops, where they are the basis of IPM, we sought to determine whether they could be similarly employed in persimmon crops. For this, we studied the predatory mite complex, the phytoseiid population dynamics and the potential prey for them during three consecutive seasons in four persimmon orchards. Phytoseiids were abundant throughout the season, found on average at a density of more than 1 predatory mite per leaf. The most abundant species was Euseius stipulatus (57.3%) followed by Typhlodromus phialatus (24.8 %), Amblyseius andersoni (17.1 %) and Paraseiulus talbii (0.8 %). Persimmon leaves provided diverse abundance of prey for predatory mites throughout the year, being mealybugs, coccids, whiteflies and thrips the most common. The abundance of predatory mites was significantly correlated to the abundance of potential prey available. From our results we anticipate that phytoseiids will be key actors in the development of persimmon IPM. Their role and how to conserve their populations in this crop are discussed in this research. 2019-03-12T11:35:12Z 2019-03-12T11:35:12Z 2019 article submittedVersion García-Martínez, F. O., Urbaneja, A., Ferragut, F., Beitia, F. J., & Pérez-Hedo, M. (2019). Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna. Experimental and Applied Acarology, 77(2), 145-159. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6167 10.1007/s10493-019-00347-7 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10493-019-00347-7 en fellowship from the INIA Spain (Subprogram DOC-INIA-CCAA) FOGM the recipient of a grant EU-FSE (Fondo Social Europeo) Conselleria d’Agricultura, Pesca i Alimentació de la Generalitat Valenciana Springer electronico
spellingShingle Euseius stipulatus
Typhlodromus phialatus
Amblyseius andersoni
Paraseiulus talbii
H10 Pests of plants
Integrated pest management
García-Martínez, Omar
Ferragut, Francisco
Beitia, Francisco J.
Urbaneja, Alberto
Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell
Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna
title Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna
title_full Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna
title_fullStr Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna
title_full_unstemmed Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna
title_short Persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well-established predatory mite fauna
title_sort persimmon orchards harbor an abundant and well established predatory mite fauna
topic Euseius stipulatus
Typhlodromus phialatus
Amblyseius andersoni
Paraseiulus talbii
H10 Pests of plants
Integrated pest management
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/6167
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10493-019-00347-7
work_keys_str_mv AT garciamartinezomar persimmonorchardsharboranabundantandwellestablishedpredatorymitefauna
AT ferragutfrancisco persimmonorchardsharboranabundantandwellestablishedpredatorymitefauna
AT beitiafranciscoj persimmonorchardsharboranabundantandwellestablishedpredatorymitefauna
AT urbanejaalberto persimmonorchardsharboranabundantandwellestablishedpredatorymitefauna
AT perezhedomertixell persimmonorchardsharboranabundantandwellestablishedpredatorymitefauna