SEX PHEROMONES AND SUPPRESSION OF THE CODLING MOTH (LEPIDOPTERA: OLETHREUTIDAE)
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Canadian Entomologist
- Vol. 110 (7) , 781-783
- https://doi.org/10.4039/ent110781-7
Abstract
Several authors (Charmillot and Baggiolini 1975; Proverbs et al. 1975; Roelofs et al. 1976; MacLellan 1976) have stated that mass-trapping male codling moths with sex pheromones did not provide economic control of this pest. MacLellan (1976), however, reported suppression of codling moth populations in unsprayed orchards 2-3 ha in size and Madsen et al. (1976) obtained similar results in orchards in which sprays were not applied specifically for codling moth control. In 1975 and 1976 similar studies were undertaken in three 0.5–0.75 ha plots (A, B, C) of mature apple trees at Vineland (Hagley 1970). Plots A and B had not received insecticide sprays from 1969 to 1974 and had relatively high codling moth infestation levels (Table I). Plot C had been on a pest management program since 1971.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Codling Moth: Suppression by Male Removal with Sex Pheromone Traps in an Isolated Apple Orchard12Journal of Economic Entomology, 1976
- SUPPRESSION OF CODLING MOTH (LEPIDOPTERA: OLETHREUTIDAE) BY SEX PHEROMONE TRAPPING OF MALESThe Canadian Entomologist, 1976
- A STUDY TO SUPPRESS CODLING MOTH (LEPIDOPTERA: OLETHREUTIDAE) WITH SEX PHEROMONE TRAPSThe Canadian Entomologist, 1975
- CODLING MOTH: EMERGENCE, SEX RATIO, AND ABUNDANCEThe Canadian Entomologist, 1974
- Effect of Rainfall on the Survival and Establishment of Codling Moth Larvae 1Environmental Entomology, 1972
- Some Aspects of the Mating and Oviposition Behavior of the Codling Moth, Carpocapsa pomonellaJournal of Economic Entomology, 1963