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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effects of artificial shade on attack by the mahogany shoot borer, Hypsipyla robusta (Moore)

TLDR
In this article, the influence of light availability on shoot-borer attack on S. macrophylla was investigated by establishing seedlings under three different artificial shade regimes, then using these seedlings to test oviposition preference of adult moths, neonate larval survival and growth and development of shoot borer larvae.
Abstract
Swietenia macrophylla King (Meliaceae: Swietenioideae) provides one of the premier timbers of the world. The mahogany shoot borer Hypsipyla robusta Moore (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) is an economically important pest of S. macrophylla throughout Asia, Africa and the Pacific. No viable method of controlling this pest is known. Previous observations have suggested that the presence of overhead shade may reduce attack by H. robusta, but this has not been investigated experimentally. This research was therefore designed to assess the influence of light availability on shoot-borer attack on S. macrophylla, by establishing seedlings under three different artificial shade regimes, then using these seedlings to test oviposition preference of adult moths, neonate larval survival and growth and development of shoot borer larvae. Oviposition preference of shoot borer moths was tested on leaves from seedlings grown under artificial shade for 63 weeks. A significant difference in choice was recorded between treatments, with 27.4 ± 1.5 eggs laid under high shade and 87.1 ± 1.8 under low shade. Neonate larval survival on early flushing leaflets of S. macrophylla did not differ significantly between shade treatments. Larval growth rate, estimated by measuring daily frass width, was significantly higher for those larvae fed on seedlings from the high and medium shade treatments (0.1 mm/day), than the low shade treatment (0.06 mm/day). In laboratory-reared larvae, the total mass of frass produced was significantly higher in the high shade treatment (0.4 g) than under the low shade treatment (0.2 g). Longer tunnel lengths were bored by larvae in plants grown under high shade (12.0 ± 2.4 cm) than under low shade (7.07 ± 1.9 cm). However, pupal mass under low shade was 48% higher than that under the high shade treatment, suggesting that plants grown under high shade were of lower nutritional quality for shoot borer larvae. These results indicate that shading of mahogany seedlings may reduce the incidence of shoot borer attack, by influencing both oviposition and larval development. The establishment of mahogany under suitable shade regimes may therefore provide a basis for controlling shoot borer attack using silvicultural approaches.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Silvicultural systems for plantation mahogany in Africa: Influences of canopy shade on tree growth and pest damage

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that there is a shade level at which Hypsipyla attack and branching are reduced, but height growth is adequate, but the reduced growth under these shade levels limit the use of this strategy for controlling Hypsinexploitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Implementing Sustainable Forest Management Using Six Concepts in an Adaptive Management Framework

TL;DR: This paper proposes six concepts to guide SFM implementation that place these concepts within an iterative decision-making framework of planning, implementation, and assessment, and provides brief definitions of and practices delimited by each concept.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypsipyla grandella em Mogno (Swietenia macrophylla): Situação Atual e Perspectivas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the most prominent research areas for its control in S. macrophylla plantations in Brazil and the most recommended control strategies for H. grandella are the host plant resistance use, silvicultural management, semiochemicals and biological control.
Dissertation

Contribution à l'amélioration de la lutte contre le miride du cacaoyer Sahlbergella singularis Hagl. (Hemiptera : Miridae). Influence des facteurs agro-écologiques sur la dynamique des populations du ravageur

Régis Babin
TL;DR: L'objectif de ce travail est d'ameliorer notre comprehension des mecanismes and d'evaluer les facteurs agro-ecologiques impliques dans the dynamique spatio-temporelle des populations naturelles de Sahlbergella singularis d'Elevage.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Resource Availability and Plant Antiherbivore Defense

TL;DR: Resource availability in the environment is proposed as the major determinant of both the amount and type of plant defense, and theories on the evolution of plant defenses are compared with other theories.
Book ChapterDOI

Plant apparency and chemical defense

TL;DR: A test of how far understanding of insect ecology has progressed will be the authors' ability to predict how patterns vary from one kind of community to another and how they will change when subjected to natural or human disturbance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term study of solar radiation regimes in a tropical wet forest using quantum sensors and hemispherical photography

TL;DR: In this article, daily photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) was monitored for 1 year in the understorey of a tropical wet forest along a transect extending from a treefall gap to the closed canopy at La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica.
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