Timing and efficacy of insecticides for control of mussel scale, Lepidosaphes ulmi, on apple using predictive models
2012
Fountain, Michelle | Harris, Adrian L. | Xu, Xiangming | Cross, J. V. (Jerry V.)
The timing and pattern of mussel scale (Lepidosaphes ulmi (L.)) crawler emergence was monitored in relation to air and bark-surface temperatures using sticky band traps around branches in apple orchards in Kent, UK in three successive years, 2007–2009. The emergence and migration of the crawlers lasted for over 4 weeks at a high level, much longer than had been previously reported. In all three years, there were clearly two peaks of emergence of the crawlers, possibly because there is a diapausing and non-diapausing form of the insect. A temperature sum model developed in the 1990s in The Netherlands using air temperatures predicted the peak emergence of crawlers to within 5–16 days; however, the model was less accurate when tree bark temperatures for the north or south of the tree were used. We have developed two models to predict the emergence of the crawlers by revising the original Dutch model. The observed emergence period (5–95%) was longer than the predicted in all three years but the two revised models performed better than the original Dutch model. In two experiments, in 2007 and 2008, the efficacy of a wide range of insecticide products at different timings during crawler emergence was evaluated. Of the 7 products compared as single or two sprays (spray volume 500 l ha⁻¹) at different emergence timings, or with the addition of adjuvants or as winter treatments, thiacloprid 480 g/l SC (375 ml ha⁻¹) and acetamiprid 20% w/w SP (375 g ha⁻¹) gave the best and similar control, reducing the percentage of fruits infested by 94%. Two sprays of fenoxycarb 25% w/w WG (600 g ha⁻¹) gave the poorest control (28%). Two sprays of spirodiclofen 240 g/l SC (600 g ha⁻¹), chlorpyrifos 75% w/w WG (960 g ha⁻¹) or flonicamid 50% w/w WG (140 g ha⁻¹) gave intermediate results, reducing the percentage infestation by 72% on average. Adjuvants gave no additional value to the treatments when applied in admixture and winter applications of mineral oil (spray volume 1000 l ha⁻¹), alone or in admixture with chlorpyrifos or thiacloprid were not effective at controlling mussel scale the following growing season. Overall, acetamiprid and thiacloprid were the most efficacious insecticides and this study indicates that sprays are best applied in the latter part of the migration (after 50% emergence) with an interval between sprays of at least two weeks to span the long emergence period of the pest.
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