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Biology and control of Dicladispa gestroi Chapuis (Col., Chrysomelidae)
Author(s) -
Delucchi V.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
journal of applied entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.795
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1439-0418
pISSN - 0931-2048
DOI - 10.1046/j.1439-0418.2001.00584.x
Subject(s) - biology , pest analysis , larva , pupa , outbreak , diapause , wet season , paddy field , dry season , pest control , agronomy , toxicology , ecology , horticulture , virology
The beetle Dicladispa gestroi is known only from Madagascar, where it is considered to be a pest of rice. Research were carried out from 1885 to 1994 in the Alaotra lake region, the main rice‐producing area of the country, characterized by a warm rainy season from October to April and a cool dry season from April to October. The adult beetles invade the rice nurseries and the first direct‐seeded fields at the beginning of the rainy season; they have a gregarious behaviour and their feeding activity, together with the mines bored by the larvae, determines a change of colour from green to pale yellow in the damage areas, which resemble outbreak areas of rice leafhoppers. Oviposition takes place only on young rice plants in the tillering stage. Females emerging after the end of February enter a reproductive diapause and leave the rice fields to ‘hibernate’. Temperature summations for the egg, larval, and pupal development, as well as for the preoviposition period have been calculated. There is no yield loss up to a larval density of 0.6 per leaf and this economic injury level is seldom exceeded in the Alaotra lake region. Life tables carried out under field conditions show that chalcid parasitoids are the main mortality factor and are responsible for the collapse of entire outbreak areas. Since the discovery of the rice yellow mottle virus in 1989 in the Alaotra lake region and the disease transmission by chrysomelids, the pest status of D. gestroi has changed and control measures have to be applied. However, to avoid interference with the action of the parasitoids, chemical applications should be limited to rice nurseries.

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