cassava green mite - a case study of biological control - copy

19
Cassava Green Mite A case study for Classical Biological Control Jawwad Hassan Mirza Ph.D. Scholar (ID# 435108485) Acarology Laboratory Department of Plant Protection King Saud University, Riyadh, KSA

Upload: jawwad-mirza

Post on 25-Jan-2017

114 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

Cassava Green MiteA case study for Classical Biological Control

Jawwad Hassan MirzaPh.D. Scholar (ID# 435108485)Acarology LaboratoryDepartment of Plant ProtectionKing Saud University, Riyadh, KSA

Page 2: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

CassavaManihot esculenta (Crantz)

• Family: Euphorbiaceae• Native to South America, Exotic to Africa (16th Centuray)• Staple food for 200 million people• Tubers and leaves consumed• Low input, easy grow, survives poor soil and

harsh environment, famine reserve crop• Among major pests = Cassava Green Mite

Page 3: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

Cassava Green MiteMononychellus tanajoa (Bondar)

(Acari: Tetranychidae)

• Native to USA, invasive to Africa (1970) • Invaded Uganda, 1971 • Spread to 27 Countries, 1985• Reduction of 50% leaf weight, 80% tuber yield• Introduced accidently

(Nyiira, 1972; Bellotti et al. 1999; Pallangyo et al. 2004)

Page 4: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

DAMAGE SYMPTOMS

Page 5: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

DISTRIBUTION AND INVASION

Lu et al. 2012

Page 6: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

NEOTROPICAL REGIONS

PATHWAY FOR INVASION

Lu et al. 2012

Page 7: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

DISTRIBUTION IN AFRICA

Page 8: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

IMPORTANCE OF CASSAVA

Page 9: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy
Page 10: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy
Page 11: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy
Page 12: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

OBJECTIVES• Keeping in view the importance of Cassava plant and

economic state of local farmers, the objective was:

Develop an efficient management strategy that can keep the pest population under check and

is cost effective

Page 13: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

UNSUCCESSFUL CONTROL MEASURES

• Lack of Acarologists

• Cultural control minute results

• Host plant resistance, a slow process

• Acaricides out of budget for farmers

Classical Biological ControlCosta et al. 2012

Page 14: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

CLASSICAL BIOLOGICAL CONTROL

• International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), 1980

• Bio-agents from different insect orders, fungi and Phytoseiid Mites

• 1984: 5.2 million Phytoseiids (7 species) from Colombia = none adapted

• 1988: 5.3 million Phytoseiids from Brazil = success– Genus : Tryphlodromalus spp, Neoseiulus spp

Yaninek et al. 1993

Page 15: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

CLASSICAL BIOLOGICAL CONTROL• 5 species of Typhlodromalus = T. aripo

• Introduced in Benin, 1993

• Spread to 21 countries

• In prey absence = dispersed or stayed on plant

• Reduced pest to 90%

• Increase in yield 35% in one season

• Add up $60 million/seasonOnzo et al. 2005

Page 16: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

OTHER BIO-AGENTS• Exotic and Indegnous Bio-agents• Tryphlodromalus manihoti has high predation• E. fustis & T. manihoti = intraguild predation • T. aripo & T. manihoti = sucess • Neoseiulus spp:– 32% pest control– Survives low pest density

• Euseius spp:– Can remain on artificial diet– Best performs when used solely

(Onzo et al. 2003)

Page 17: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

TAKE HOME MESSAGE

• Quarantine measures should be strictly followed

• Conservation of biological control agents

• Artificial diet enhance predation

Page 18: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

REFERENCES• Bellotti, A.C., Smith, L. and Lapointe, S.L., 1999. Recent advances in cassava pest management. Ann. Rev.

Entomol. 44: 343-370.• Costa, E.C., Teodoro, A.V., Re go, A.S., Maciel, A.G., and Sarmento, R.A., 2012. Population structure and

dynamics of the cassava green mite Mononychellus tanajoa (Bondar) and the predator Euseius ho (DeLeon) (Acari: Tetranychidae, Phytoseiidae). Arthropods. 1: 55-62.

• Lu, H., Ma, Q., Chen, Q., Lu, F., and Xu, X., 2012. Potential geographic distribution of the cassava green mite Mononychellus tanajoa in Hainan, China. African Journal of Agricultural Research. 7: 1206-1213.

• Nyiira, Z.M., 1972. Report on investigation of cassava mite, Mononychus tanajoa Bondar. Unpublished report. Kampala, Uganda: Kawanda Research Station.

• Onzo, A., Hanna R. and Sabelis M.W., 2005. Biological control of cassava green mites in Africa: impact of the predatory mite Typhlodromalus aripo. Entomologische Berichten. 65(1).

• Onzo, A., Hanna, R. and Sabelis, M.W., 2003. Interactions in an acarine predator guild: impact on Typhlodromalus aripo abundance and biological control of cassava green mite in Africa. Exp. Appl. Acarol. 31: 225–241.

• Pallangyo, B., Hanna R., Toko M., Gnanvossou D., Mgoo V., Otema M., Onzo A., Hountondji F., Nsami E. and Mfugale O., 2004. Biological control of cassava green mite in Tanzania. Proceedings of 9th Triennial Symposium of the International Society for Tropical Root Crops - Africa Branch (ISTRC - AB) Mombasa, Kenya.

• van Rijn, P.C.J. and Tanigoshi, L.K., 1999. Pollen as food for the predatory mites Iphiseius degenerans and Neoseiulus cucumeris (Acari: Phytoseiidae): dietary range and life history. Exp. Appl. Acarol. 23: 785–802.

• Yaninek, J.S., A. Onzo and B. Ojo, 1993. Continent wide experiences releasing neotropical phytoseiids against the exotic cassava green mite in Africa. Exp. Appl. Acaro. 16: 145-160.

Page 19: Cassava Green Mite - A case study of Biological Control - Copy

THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME

Pic: A Spider Mite (Tetranychus urticae) infestation on Marygold