December 4, 2024
Mohammadali Mirhosseini

Mohammadali Mirhosseini

Academic Rank: Assistant professor
Address:
Degree: Ph.D in Department of Plant Protection
Phone: 02146069228
Faculty: Faculty of Agricultural Engineering

Research

Title An egg parasitoid interferes with biological control of tomato leafminer by augmentation of Nesidiocoris tenuis (Hemiptera: Miridae)
Type Article
Keywords
Journal BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
DOI
Researchers Mohammadali Mirhosseini (First researcher) , Yaghoub Fathipour (Second researcher) ,

Abstract

Tomato leaf miner (TLM), Tuta absoluta (Meyrick) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) is a serious pest of tomato pro-duction in many parts of the world. The TLM has demonstrated capacity to evolve resistance to insecticides, and residues of these on tomato fruit pose hazards to human health, making biological control solutions an urgent priority. We assessed the biological control potential of the predatory bug Nesidiocoris tenuis (Reuter), in com-bination with the egg parasitoidTrichogramma brassicaeBezdenko at various release rates (0, 10 or 30 females/ m 2 /week). Predators were released either 10 days before, or 10 days after, pest establishment. The predator lowered pest density only when it was released before the pest, but not to levels likely to retain the population below economic threshold. The parasitoid had no direct e ffect on pest density, but negatively a ffected the predator's impact on the pest, likely by reducing prey suitability and shifting feeding behavior toward more herbivory and/or cannibalism. Both pest and predator displayed negative density dependence; their population growth rates declined with increasing conspecifi c density. Our results indicate that N. tenuis should be aug-mented using a predator-in-fi rst approach, and without simultaneous releases of egg parasitoids. Augmentation of N. tenuis will require integration with other tactics to provide adequate control of TLM, but has the potential for ancillary impacts on other tomato pests such as white flies and spider mites.