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Assessment of Trichogramma japonicum and T. chilonis as Potential Biological Control Agents of Yellow Stem Borer in Rice
Two species of wasps were assessed for their effectiveness against yellow stem borer . A laboratory cage test with and showed that both species parasitized yellow stem borer egg masses at 60.0% ± 9.13% and 40.7% ± 7.11%, respectively, with egg parasitism rates of 15.8% ± 22.2% for and 2.8% ± 5.0% fo...
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Published in: | Insects (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2017-02, Vol.8 (1), p.19 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Two species of
wasps were assessed for their effectiveness against yellow stem borer
. A laboratory cage test with
and
showed that both species parasitized yellow stem borer egg masses at 60.0% ± 9.13% and 40.7% ± 7.11%, respectively, with egg parasitism rates of 15.8% ± 22.2% for
and 2.8% ± 5.0% for
. Once the host eggs were parasitized, emergence rates were high for both species (95.7% ± 0.12% for
and 100% for
). In paddy field trials, the two
species were released at three densities (50,000/ha, 100,000/ha and 200,000/ha) in Southwestern China. Egg mass parasitism was 9% ± 7.7% for
and 15% ± 14.1% for
, and again only a relatively small fraction of eggs was successfully parasitized. No clear conclusion could be drawn on the most efficient release rate as no significant differences were found among the three release rates. A comparison of field-collected
with
and
mass reared on
showed significantly larger body size and ovipositor length in field-collected wasps, suggesting potentially higher effectiveness on yellow stem borer eggs after at least one generation on the target host. Factors contributing to the low field parasitism rates are discussed. |
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ISSN: | 2075-4450 2075-4450 |
DOI: | 10.3390/insects8010019 |