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Mixture of Synthetic Plant Volatiles Attracts More Stick Tea Thrips Dendrothrips minowai Priesner (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) and the Application as an Attractant in Tea Plantations.

Authors :
Xu Z
Zhang G
Qiu Y
Luo Z
Cai X
Li Z
Bian L
Fu N
Zhou L
Magsi FH
Chen Z
Zhang X
Xiu C
Source :
Plants (Basel, Switzerland) [Plants (Basel)] 2024 Jul 15; Vol. 13 (14). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 15.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The stick tea thrip ( Dendrothrips minowai ) is one of the most serious sucking pests of tea plants ( Camellia sinensis ) in China, North Korea, and Japan. Plant volatile lures are widely used for both monitoring and mass trapping. Previously, we demonstrated that sticky traps baited with p -anisaldehyde, eugenol, farnesene, or 3-methyl butanal captured significantly more D. minowai in tea plantations, with p -anisaldehyde notably capturing the most. In this study, we showed that D. minowai adults exhibited significantly higher attraction to mixtures of p -anisaldehyde, eugenol, and farnesene compared to an equivalent dose of p -anisaldehyde alone in H-tube olfactometer assays under laboratory conditions. Moreover, in field experiments conducted in 2022, rubber septa impregnated with a ternary blend of p -anisaldehyde, eugenol, and farnesene (at 3-4.5 mg and a ratio of 3:1:1) captured the highest number of adults on sticky traps, outperforming traps bailed with individual components or a solvent control over two weeks. Significantly, the mass trapping strategy employing these lures achieved control efficacies ranging from 62.8% to 70.7% when compared to traps without attractant, which achieved control efficacies of only 14.2% to 35.4% across three test sites in 2023. These results indicate that the combination of p -anisaldehyde, eugenol, and farnesene exhibits an additive or synergistic effect on D. minowai . In conclusion, our findings establish a theoretical framework and provide practical technological support for integrating attractant-based strategies into comprehensive thrips management strategies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2223-7747
Volume :
13
Issue :
14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Plants (Basel, Switzerland)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39065471
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13141944