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N. C. Leppla, J. H. Frank and M. B. Adjei Management of Pest Mole Crickets in Florida and Puerto Rico with a Nematode and Parasitic Wasp.

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Presentation on theme: "N. C. Leppla, J. H. Frank and M. B. Adjei Management of Pest Mole Crickets in Florida and Puerto Rico with a Nematode and Parasitic Wasp."— Presentation transcript:

1 N. C. Leppla, J. H. Frank and M. B. Adjei Management of Pest Mole Crickets in Florida and Puerto Rico with a Nematode and Parasitic Wasp

2 Scapteriscus didactylus, the “West Indian mole cricket” or “changa,” probably arrived in the West Indies by flying from South America hundreds of years ago

3 Scapteriscus abbreviatus, the “short-winged mole cricket,” occurs in Puerto Rico and a few other islands, and probably arrived in ship ballast~ this species cannot fly and is only a minor problem

4 Damage to sweet peppers in the Dominican Republic caused by the “West Indian mole cricket”

5 In Grenada, vegetable seedlings are attacked by the same mole cricket

6 Damage to a Florida golf course by the South American mole cricket, Scapteriscus vicinus J.P. Parkman-UF,IFAS

7   Mole cricket damage and chemical pesticides for control cost an estimated 100 million dollars in the Southeastern US annually   Chemicals are too expensive for use on pasture land   Mole crickets rebound in most treated areas   Concern about non-target effects of chemicals Chemical Control www.pesticidereform.org

8 Biological Control Alternative   A two pronged approach   Parasitic nematode Steinernema scapterisci   Parasitic Wasp- Larra bicolor

9 Parasitic nematode Steinernema scapterisci K. Nguyen - UF,IFAS

10 exit the cadaver and are temporarily free- living free-living nematodes penetration juveniles develop in the host body sexual maturation produce eggs Steinernematid Life Cycle

11 Flask containing nematodes on diet-soaked sponge

12 Application of nematodes to pasture land

13 Mole Cricket State Program Objective : To conduct research/demonstration projects that will widely distribute the entomopathogenic nematode, Steinernema scapterisci, in Florida; determine its establishment, rate of spread and impact on Scapteriscus spp. mole crickets, and support its commercialization

14 Nematode applications   Nematac S   80 billion nematodes   32 counties   Education & training   Nematode diagnostics   Nematode survey   Refined methods   Establish & Spread

15 Mole Cricket Nematode in Florida   6 months- 80% mole crickets infected   1 year- infected mole crickets spread nematodes across the pasture   3 years- 85% decline in mole crickets 40-95% recovery of bahiagrass 20-35% infected mole crickets

16 Biological Control of Mole Crickets in Florida by the Nematode

17 Mole Cricket Nematode Project In Puerto Rico   Apply Nematac S in appropriate habitats   Survey for entomopathogenic nematodes   Adapt release and evaluation methods   Demonstrate establishment and spread   Determine the impact on pest mole crickets

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19 Mole cricket escaping from soap solution in its gallery at a golf course in Puerto Rico

20 A turf farm in Puerto Rico with “changas”

21 A palm grove next to a 3-acre peanut field in Puerto Rico

22 A 1-acre organic farm in Puerto Rico

23 Mole cricket pitfall trap at a golf course in Puerto Rico

24 Biological Control of Mole Crickets in Puerto Rico by the Nematode   Scapteriscus didactylus, was trapped at the golf course and organic garden   Scapteriscus abbreviatus was also discovered at the organic garden   Mole crickets captured at the golf course contained Steinernema scapterisci   Steinernema scapterisci became established at the golf course and killed S. didactylus   Mole crickets from the organic garden were not infected

25 Parasitic Wasp- Larra bicolor Lyle Buss- UF, IFAS

26 Larra bicolor on Spermacoce verticillata Lyle Buss- UF, IFAS

27 Biological Control of Mole Crickets in Florida & Puerto Rico by the Wasp   Parasitism of Scapteriscus vicinus 24% near Gainesville, Florida   Wasp in 22 Florida counties by natural spread and releases   Larra bicolor feeds at nectaries of 4 plants plus Spermacoce verticillata   Spermacoce verticillata plots provided near mole cricket infestations   Cooperators watch for wasps feeding on the flowers   Wasp may function additively with the nematode

28 Management of Pest Mole Crickets in Florida and Puerto Rico   Established the nematode and wasp   Determined that they are effective   Provided economical mole cricket control We have shown that biological control offers long-term, cost effective mole cricket management

29 http://ipm.ifas.ufl.edu Any Questions? Leppla, Frank & Adjei


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