Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]

The experiment was carried out from February 2020 to November 2021 in two Clementine mandarin orchards from Valencian Community (Spain). The orchards were located in Borriol (40°00'45.5"N 0°05'56.3"W 110 m. a.s.l) and Moncófar (39°48'12.1"N 0°09'58.7"W 15 m. a.s.l) and were 1.4 and 1.1 ha, respectiv...

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Autor principal: Plata, Ángel
Otros Autores: Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Formato: dataset
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA) 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8477
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author Plata, Ángel
author2 Gómez-Martínez, María A.
author_browse Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Plata, Ángel
author_facet Gómez-Martínez, María A.
Plata, Ángel
author_sort Plata, Ángel
collection ReDivia
description The experiment was carried out from February 2020 to November 2021 in two Clementine mandarin orchards from Valencian Community (Spain). The orchards were located in Borriol (40°00'45.5"N 0°05'56.3"W 110 m. a.s.l) and Moncófar (39°48'12.1"N 0°09'58.7"W 15 m. a.s.l) and were 1.4 and 1.1 ha, respectively. Both orchards were selected because they had a medium abundance of D. aberiae. Eight replicated blocks were evenly distributed across the two orchards. Each block was divided into paired 4x4 tree plots, one receiving the “ant-allowed” treatment and the other receiving the “ant-excluded” treatment. In ant-excluded plots, sticky barriers were applied to trunks of trees to prevent ants accessing up to the canopy. To do this, the tree trunk was wrapped with Parafilm® 10-30 cm above ground. The wrapped zone was coated with Tad All-Weather® adhesive. The four central trees of each plot were sampled monthly. From each tree, 40 leaves (ten leaves per cardinal direction) and 20 fruits (five fruit per cardinal direction) were visually inspected, and the number of mealybugs, ants and potential predators were identified and counted. The number of ants crossing (both up and down) an imaginary line surrounding the trunk at 30 cm above ground were counted for two minutes. Ants were identified to species and predators identification varied among groups from order (e.g. Araneae) to species (e.g. Rodolia cardinalis). All observations were made between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., as ant activity in citrus canopies is stable over this period.
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institution Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
publisherStr Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA)
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spelling ReDivia84772025-04-25T14:55:04Z Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset] Plata, Ángel Gómez-Martínez, María A. Beitia, Francisco J. Tena, Alejandro Ant-attendance Ant-exclusion Biological control Hemiptera Honeydew Lasius grandis H10 Pests of plants Biological control Citrus The experiment was carried out from February 2020 to November 2021 in two Clementine mandarin orchards from Valencian Community (Spain). The orchards were located in Borriol (40°00'45.5"N 0°05'56.3"W 110 m. a.s.l) and Moncófar (39°48'12.1"N 0°09'58.7"W 15 m. a.s.l) and were 1.4 and 1.1 ha, respectively. Both orchards were selected because they had a medium abundance of D. aberiae. Eight replicated blocks were evenly distributed across the two orchards. Each block was divided into paired 4x4 tree plots, one receiving the “ant-allowed” treatment and the other receiving the “ant-excluded” treatment. In ant-excluded plots, sticky barriers were applied to trunks of trees to prevent ants accessing up to the canopy. To do this, the tree trunk was wrapped with Parafilm® 10-30 cm above ground. The wrapped zone was coated with Tad All-Weather® adhesive. The four central trees of each plot were sampled monthly. From each tree, 40 leaves (ten leaves per cardinal direction) and 20 fruits (five fruit per cardinal direction) were visually inspected, and the number of mealybugs, ants and potential predators were identified and counted. The number of ants crossing (both up and down) an imaginary line surrounding the trunk at 30 cm above ground were counted for two minutes. Ants were identified to species and predators identification varied among groups from order (e.g. Araneae) to species (e.g. Rodolia cardinalis). All observations were made between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., as ant activity in citrus canopies is stable over this period. This dataset is associated to the published paper “Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus”. In this paper, the effect of tending ants on the biological control of D. aberiae is evaluated. To do this, we compared: i) the density of D. aberiae, ii) the density of its natural enemies and iii) the damage produced by the mealybug in trees with (control) and without ants (ants excluded with sticky barriers) in two citrus orchards across two consecutive years. 2022-12-20T09:00:41Z 2022-12-20T09:00:41Z 2022-12-20 dataset http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8477 10.58582/redivia.8477 en Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ openAccess Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Agrarias (IVIA) electronico
spellingShingle Ant-attendance
Ant-exclusion
Biological control
Hemiptera
Honeydew
Lasius grandis
H10 Pests of plants
Biological control
Citrus
Plata, Ángel
Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]
title Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]
title_full Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]
title_fullStr Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]
title_full_unstemmed Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]
title_short Exclusion of Mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug Delottococcus aberiae in citrus [Dataset]
title_sort exclusion of mediterranean ant species enhances biological control of the invasive mealybug delottococcus aberiae in citrus dataset
topic Ant-attendance
Ant-exclusion
Biological control
Hemiptera
Honeydew
Lasius grandis
H10 Pests of plants
Biological control
Citrus
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8477
work_keys_str_mv AT plataangel exclusionofmediterraneanantspeciesenhancesbiologicalcontroloftheinvasivemealybugdelottococcusaberiaeincitrusdataset