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Influence of rubber trees on leaf-miner damage to coffee plants in an agroforestry system.

Authors :
Righi, Ciro Abbud
Campoe, Otávio Camargo
Bernardes, Marcos Silveira
Lunz, Aureny Maria Pereira
Piedade, Sônia Maria Stefano
Pereira, Carlos Rodrigues
Source :
Agroforestry Systems; Dec2013, Vol. 87 Issue 6, p1351-1362, 12p
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The coffee leaf-miner (CLM) ( Leucoptera coffeella Guérin-Mèneville; Lepidoptera: Lyonetiidae), the main pest of coffee plants, occurs widely throughout the Neotropics where it has a significant, negative economic and quantitative impact on coffee production. This study was conducted in a rubber tree/coffee plant interface that was influenced by the trees to a varying degrees depending on the location of the coffee plants, i.e. from beneath the rubber trees, extending through a range of distances from the edge of the tree plantation to end in a coffee monocrop field. The most severe damage inflicted on coffee plants by the CLM (number of mined leaves) from April, which marks the start of the water deficit period, until September 2003 was in the zone close to the rubber trees, whereas the damage inflicted on plants in the monocropped field was comparable to that on coffee plants grown directly beneath the rubber trees, which received about 25–40 % of the available irradiance (I <subscript>r</subscript>—available irradiation at a certain position divided by the irradiation received in full sunlight, i.e. in the monocrop). From May until July damage caused by the CLM nearly doubled in each month. In midwinter (July), the damage decreased perceptibly from the tree edge toward the open field. From September onward, with the rising air temperatures CLM damage in the coffee monocrop started to increase. Based on these results, we conclude that coffee plants grown in the full sun incurred the most damage only at the end of winter, with warming air temperatures. Coffee plants grown in shadier locations (25–40 % I <subscript>r</subscript>) were less damaged by the CLM, although a higher proportion of their leaves were mined. The rubber trees probably acted as a shelter during the cold autumn and winter seasons, leading to greater CLM damage over a distance outside the rubber tree plantation that was about equal to the height of the trees. Future studies should attempt to relate leaf hydric potential to pest attack in field conditions. More rigorous measurements of shade conditions could improve our understanding of the relationship of this factor to CLM attack. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01674366
Volume :
87
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Agroforestry Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
91993252
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10457-013-9642-9