Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/23636
Title: Reduced-risk management of Rhagoletis cerasi flies (host race Prunus) in combination with a preliminary phenological model
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Ziraat Fakültesi/Bitki Koruma Bölümü.
Kovancı, Orkun Barış
Kovancı, Bahattin
AAH-2039-2021
12759314200
56347165700
Keywords: Entomology
Yellow sticky traps
Tephritidae
Elevation
Degree-day
Cherry fruit fly
Tephritidae
Rhagoletis cingulata
Rhagoletis cerasi
Prunus avium
Prunus
Diptera
Temperature
Populations
Ophtera-brumata
Diptera-tephritidaeoper
Cherry fruit-fly
Issue Date: 27-Oct-2006
Publisher: Entomology
Citation: Kovancı, O. B. ve Kovancı, B. (2006). ''Reduced-risk management of Rhagoletis cerasi flies (host race Prunus) in combination with a preliminary phenological model''. Journal of Insect Science, 6.
Abstract: Seasonal flight activity of Rhagoletis cerasi (L.) (Diptera: Tephritidae) adults was monitored using yellow sticky traps at sweet cherry orchards under different management regimes in Bursa, northwestern Turkey, during 1997-1998. In the reduced-risk backyard orchards, soil ploughing in the fall or spring to destroy the pupae was combined with a single application of an insecticide, while conventionally managed orchards received six to seven insecticide applications for controlling adults. Traps in commercial orchards caught significantly fewer adults than those in reduced-risk backyard orchards. Levels of cherry fruit fly fruit damage were very low (0.1 %) in commercial orchards, whereas infestation rates averaged 2.2% in reduced-risk orchards. A preliminary phenology model was developed for optimal timing of insecticide applications based on air temperature summations since 1 February. In the reduced-risk backyard orchards, the first flies were captured between 25 May and 2 June, corresponding to an average degree-day (DD) accumulation of 582.50 +/- 10.50 DD at an altitude of 150 m. However, first adult emergence at 1170 m was recorded between 6 and 14 June, averaging 667.50 +/- 14.50 DD. Adult emergence exhibited bimodal peaks in a single flight at low altitude but there was a single peak at high altitude sites. Total adult flight period averaged 459 +/- 29.50 and 649 +/- 25.50 DD at low and high altitude sites, respectively. Our prediction model suggests that the optimum spray-window for a single insecticide application occurs between 577.70 and 639.40 DD at 150 m and between 780.90 and 848.60 DD at 1170 m.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1673/031.006.3401
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/23636
ISSN: 1536-2442
Appears in Collections:Scopus
Web of Science

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