Nematodes to control the large pine weevil

Hylobius abietis is a very destructive pest of conifer restocking sites throughout Northern Europe, and if left uncontrolled it causes significant economic losses. Repeated field trials by Forest Research UK have shown that applications of Steinernema carpocapsae to the soil surrounding conifer stum...

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Main Author: Torr, Peter
Published: University of Aberdeen 2005
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.425044
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4250442017-04-20T03:32:25ZNematodes to control the large pine weevilTorr, Peter2005Hylobius abietis is a very destructive pest of conifer restocking sites throughout Northern Europe, and if left uncontrolled it causes significant economic losses. Repeated field trials by Forest Research UK have shown that applications of Steinernema carpocapsae to the soil surrounding conifer stumps infested with H. abietis results in consistent and significant reductions in weevil emergence; at least equal to other tested nematodes. Contrary to its ambusher classification, S. carpocapsae was shown to be as motile as the intermediate S. feltiae and cruiser Heterorohabditis megidis in forest substrates, but in sand it was far less motile. These data suggested the perception that S. carpocapsae is relatively sedentary has resulted from testing motility in inappropriate substrates. Further experiments showed that all tested entomopathogenic nematodes, including S. carpocapsae, showed strong positive thigmotaxis to long distance seismic vibrations through peat; a response to a cue never before documented in insect parasites. In addition, when chemical gradients were compromised, all tested nematode species could still follow vibrational clues, implying that with increasing soil organic matter the utility of host chemical cues declines. The results also suggested that seismic vibrations are potentially less prone to interference from the soil matrix than chemical signals. These data facilitated rejection of the hypothesis that S. carpocapsae does not respond to long-range host cues. A field experiment established that the good field performance of S. carpocapsae was not due to an increased capacity for field survival of this nematode. The cruise foraging, locally isolated S. kraussei was less efficacious than S. carpocapsae against H. abietis, yet persisted in the soil for longer.634.97516768University of Aberdeenhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.425044http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk/R?func=search-advanced-go&find_code1=WSN&request1=AAIU203887Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
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topic 634.97516768
spellingShingle 634.97516768
Torr, Peter
Nematodes to control the large pine weevil
description Hylobius abietis is a very destructive pest of conifer restocking sites throughout Northern Europe, and if left uncontrolled it causes significant economic losses. Repeated field trials by Forest Research UK have shown that applications of Steinernema carpocapsae to the soil surrounding conifer stumps infested with H. abietis results in consistent and significant reductions in weevil emergence; at least equal to other tested nematodes. Contrary to its ambusher classification, S. carpocapsae was shown to be as motile as the intermediate S. feltiae and cruiser Heterorohabditis megidis in forest substrates, but in sand it was far less motile. These data suggested the perception that S. carpocapsae is relatively sedentary has resulted from testing motility in inappropriate substrates. Further experiments showed that all tested entomopathogenic nematodes, including S. carpocapsae, showed strong positive thigmotaxis to long distance seismic vibrations through peat; a response to a cue never before documented in insect parasites. In addition, when chemical gradients were compromised, all tested nematode species could still follow vibrational clues, implying that with increasing soil organic matter the utility of host chemical cues declines. The results also suggested that seismic vibrations are potentially less prone to interference from the soil matrix than chemical signals. These data facilitated rejection of the hypothesis that S. carpocapsae does not respond to long-range host cues. A field experiment established that the good field performance of S. carpocapsae was not due to an increased capacity for field survival of this nematode. The cruise foraging, locally isolated S. kraussei was less efficacious than S. carpocapsae against H. abietis, yet persisted in the soil for longer.
author Torr, Peter
author_facet Torr, Peter
author_sort Torr, Peter
title Nematodes to control the large pine weevil
title_short Nematodes to control the large pine weevil
title_full Nematodes to control the large pine weevil
title_fullStr Nematodes to control the large pine weevil
title_full_unstemmed Nematodes to control the large pine weevil
title_sort nematodes to control the large pine weevil
publisher University of Aberdeen
publishDate 2005
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.425044
work_keys_str_mv AT torrpeter nematodestocontrolthelargepineweevil
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