Integrated pest management in cotton: exploiting behaviour-modifying (semiochemical) compounds for managing cotton pests

Title
Integrated pest management in cotton: exploiting behaviour-modifying (semiochemical) compounds for managing cotton pests
Publication Date
2013
Author(s)
Mensah, Robert
Gregg, Peter
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7534-3567
Email: pgregg@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:pgregg
del Socorro, Alice
Moore, Christopher J
Hawes, Anthony J
Watts, Nick
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Place of publication
Australia
DOI
10.1071/CP13060
UNE publication id
une:15020
Abstract
We review here research on semiochemicals for cotton pest management carried out in successive Cotton Co-operative Research Centres from 1998 to 2012. Australian cotton is now dominated by transgenic (Bt) varieties, which provide a strong platform for integrated pest management of key pests such as 'Helicoverpa' spp., but new technologies are required to manage the development of resistance in 'Helicoverpa' spp. to transgenic cotton and the problems posed by emerging and secondary pests, especially sucking insects. A long-range attractant for 'Helicoverpa' moths, based on plant volatiles, has been commercialised as Magnet®. The product has substantial area-wide impacts on moth populations, and only limited effects on beneficial insects. Potential roles are being investigated for this product in resistance management of 'Helicoverpa' spp. on transgenic cotton. Short-range, non-volatile compounds on organ surfaces of plants that do not support development of 'Helicoverpa' spp. have been identified; these compounds deter feeding or oviposition, or are toxic to insect pests. One such product, Sero X®, is effective on 'Helicoverpa' spp. and sucking pests such as whiteflies ('Bemisia tabaci'), green mirids ('Creontiades dilutus'), and other hemipteran insects, and is in the advanced stages of commercialisation.
Link
Citation
Crop and Pasture Science, 64(8), p. 763-773
ISSN
1836-5795
1836-0947
Start page
763
End page
773

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