The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya

Pest control in agriculture is a necessity and the use of chemicals is the method by choice for most farmers. But the use of chemicals comes with a price; the pests develops resistance and the chemicals pollutes the environment. It is therefore of urgent importance to shift pest control from chemica...

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Main Author: Kvick Nastaj, Nadja
Format: M2
Language:Inglés
Published: SLU/Dept. of Ecology 2020
Subjects:
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author Kvick Nastaj, Nadja
author_browse Kvick Nastaj, Nadja
author_facet Kvick Nastaj, Nadja
author_sort Kvick Nastaj, Nadja
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Pest control in agriculture is a necessity and the use of chemicals is the method by choice for most farmers. But the use of chemicals comes with a price; the pests develops resistance and the chemicals pollutes the environment. It is therefore of urgent importance to shift pest control from chemicals to other methods. Biological control is an alternative which can prove to be as effective as chemicals but without the negative effects. In Kenya, the agriculture sector is the backbone in the economy, contributing to the livelihood of near 80% of the population. One of the most common vegetables grown in the country is cabbage, but due to various pests, the production is threatened. The most severe pests affecting cabbage is the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella, DBM for short. If left uncontrolled, the moth larvae can lead to massive yield losses, and in Kenya entire yields have been destroyed. This study aimed to investigate if the use of different tree species used in an agroforestry system affected the presence of two natural enemies to DBM, parasitoids and insectivorous birds. Cabbage plants, Brassica oleracea var. capitate, were grown specifically for the study and distributed to different plots fulfilling specific study criteria regarding presence of one of three tree species. Observations of DBM-larvae presence and collection of pupae were made at regular intervals during a period of two weeks. Due to bad weather conditions during the study: drought during the initial phase leading to plants dying, followed by rainy nights hampering the expected DBM population growth, the DBM abundance was much lower than expected. Due to these circum-stances leading to reduced number of replicates when entire plots had to be abandoned and DBM densities were low, statistical tests of data could not be performed. Nevertheless, caged plants seemed to have an effect, indicating that birds did contribute to the reduction and the loss was slightly higher on Macadamia plots.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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spelling RepoSLU160572020-09-19T01:00:48Z The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya Kvick Nastaj, Nadja agroforestry Plutella xylostella biocontrol Pest control in agriculture is a necessity and the use of chemicals is the method by choice for most farmers. But the use of chemicals comes with a price; the pests develops resistance and the chemicals pollutes the environment. It is therefore of urgent importance to shift pest control from chemicals to other methods. Biological control is an alternative which can prove to be as effective as chemicals but without the negative effects. In Kenya, the agriculture sector is the backbone in the economy, contributing to the livelihood of near 80% of the population. One of the most common vegetables grown in the country is cabbage, but due to various pests, the production is threatened. The most severe pests affecting cabbage is the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella, DBM for short. If left uncontrolled, the moth larvae can lead to massive yield losses, and in Kenya entire yields have been destroyed. This study aimed to investigate if the use of different tree species used in an agroforestry system affected the presence of two natural enemies to DBM, parasitoids and insectivorous birds. Cabbage plants, Brassica oleracea var. capitate, were grown specifically for the study and distributed to different plots fulfilling specific study criteria regarding presence of one of three tree species. Observations of DBM-larvae presence and collection of pupae were made at regular intervals during a period of two weeks. Due to bad weather conditions during the study: drought during the initial phase leading to plants dying, followed by rainy nights hampering the expected DBM population growth, the DBM abundance was much lower than expected. Due to these circum-stances leading to reduced number of replicates when entire plots had to be abandoned and DBM densities were low, statistical tests of data could not be performed. Nevertheless, caged plants seemed to have an effect, indicating that birds did contribute to the reduction and the loss was slightly higher on Macadamia plots. SLU/Dept. of Ecology 2020 M2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/16057/
spellingShingle agroforestry
Plutella xylostella
biocontrol
Kvick Nastaj, Nadja
The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya
title The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya
title_full The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya
title_fullStr The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya
title_short The role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest Plutella xylostella : a field study in Kenya
title_sort role of agroforestry tree species in biocontrol of the cabbage pest plutella xylostella : a field study in kenya
topic agroforestry
Plutella xylostella
biocontrol