Search results for " Tephritidae"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Toxics or Lures? Biological and Behavioral Effects of Plant Essential Oils on Tephritidae Fruit Flies.

2021

The family Tephritidae (Diptera) includes species that are highly invasive and harmful to crops. Due to globalization, international trade, and human displacement, their spread is continuously increasing. Unfortunately, the control of tephritid flies is still closely linked to the use of synthetic insecticides, which are responsible for detrimental effects on the environment and human health. Recently, research is looking for alternative and more eco-friendly tools to be adopted in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) programs. In this regard, essential oils (EOs) and their main compounds represent a promising alternative to chemical insecticides. EOs are made up of phytoconstituents formed fro…

Integrated pest managementFumigation Ingestion toxicity Integrated Pest Management Phenylpropanoids Tephritid Terpenes True fruit flyfumigationVolatilePharmaceutical ScienceOrganic chemistryReviewBiologyFumigation; Ingestion toxicity; Integrated Pest Management; Phenylpropanoids; Tephritid; Terpenes; True fruit fly; Animals; Insect Control; Oils Volatile; Plant Oils; TephritidaeInsect ControlIntegrated Pest ManagementAnalytical ChemistryHuman healthSterile insect techniqueQD241-441TephritidaeDrug Discoveryingestion toxicityOils VolatileBactroceraAnimalsPlant OilsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCeratitisterpenes; phenylpropanoids; true fruit fly; Integrated Pest Management; tephritid; fumigation; ingestion toxicitybusiness.industryfungiTephritidaebiology.organism_classificationBiotechnologytephritidAnastrephaChemistry (miscellaneous)Molecular Medicinetrue fruit flybusinessOilsterpenesphenylpropanoidsMolecules (Basel, Switzerland)
researchProduct

Lethal and behavioural effects of a green insecticide against an invasive polyphagous fruit fly pest and its safety to mammals

2021

Abstract Plant essential oil-based insecticides, with special reference to those that may be obtained from largely available biomasses, represent a valuable tool for Integrated Pest Management. However, the sublethal effects and the potential effects on aggressive insect traits of these green insecticides are understudied. Herein, the lethal and sub-lethal effects of the carlina oxide, constituting more than 97% of the whole Carlina acaulis (Asteraceae) root essential oil (EO), were determined against an invasive polyphagous tephritid pest, Ceratitis capitata (medfly). The carlina oxide was formulated in a mucilaginous solution containing carboxymethylcellulose sodium salt, sucrose, and hyd…

Integrated pest managementInsecticidesEnvironmental EngineeringHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAsteraceaeBiologyCarlina acaulisToxicologyTephritidaeOils VolatileAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryMammalsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCeratitis capitataGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryPesticideCeratitis capitatabiology.organism_classificationPollutionAcute toxicityRatsSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataToxicityPEST analysisAggressiveness Attract and kill Carlina acaulis Carlina oxide Plant essential oil Tephritidae
researchProduct

Parassitizzazione di Bactrocera oleae su olivo coltivato e selvatico in Sicilia e nel Western Cape (Sud Africa)

2011

Nel 2009 e nel 2010 in Sicilia e nella regione del Western Cape (Sud Africa) sono stati condotti studi sulla parassitizzazione della mosca delle olive, Bactrocera oleae, raccogliendo i frutti su piante di olivo coltivato (Olea europaea ssp. europaea) e selvatico (O. europaea ssp. oleaster in Sicilia, O. europaea ssp. cuspidata in Sud Africa); le piante delle due sottospecie erano non trattate e distanti pochi metri. I campioni sono stati raccolti nell’arco di quattro mesi in Sicilia e di due mesi in Sud Africa. Per i campioni di olive sono stati registrati gli attacchi di B. oleae (punture di ovideposizione e fori d’uscita) e il diametro equatoriale. Le olive attaccate da B. oleae in Sicili…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicatamosca delle olive Tephritidae Braconidae diametro delle drupe
researchProduct

Evaluating the quality of the Mexican fruit-fly, Anastrepha ludens, as host for the parasitoid Melittobia digitata

2013

We investigated the presence of Melittobia digitata (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) and its associations with its natural hosts in Veracruz, Mexico. The parasitoid was confirmed to be present and found to attack prepupae of Trypoxylon and Sceliphron (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae and Sphecidae, respectively) mud daubers as well as pupae of the Mexican fruit fly Anastrepha ludens (Diptera: Tephritidae). Since A. ludens is a very important pest of citrus and mango in Mexico and Central America, we evaluated, in laboratory experiments, the quality of A. ludens as host of M. digitata comparing the development of the parasitoid in another unrelated fly species (Sarcophaga [Neobellieria] bullata) (Diptera: …

Sphecidaefood.ingredientbiologyTrypoxylonbiology.organism_classificationbiological pest control pupal parasitoids Eulophidae TephritidaeSceliphronParasitoidMud dauberCrabronidaefoodSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicatalcsh:Biology (General)TephritidaeBotanyAnastrepha ludenslcsh:QH301-705.5
researchProduct

Relation of fruit color, elongation, hardness, and volume to the infestation of olive cultivars by the olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae

2012

The susceptibility of olive cultivars to the olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae (Rossi) (Diptera: Tephritidae), has seldom been studied. This article examines factors associated with olive fruit fly infestation of 16 commonly planted Sicilian olive cultivars. Total infestation data were simultaneously correlated with categorical and quantitative factors using ordinal logistic regression. When all factors were included in the analysis, year, sampling date, cultivar, and fruit color were highly significant, but the quantitative factors fruit volume, fruit elongation, and fruit hardness were not. When the analysis was repeated excluding cultivar, all quantitative factors were significant, and e…

biologyfungiOlive fruit flyfood and beveragesmedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataAgronomyInsect ScienceTephritidaeOleaceaeInfestationmedicineBactroceraCultivarElongationOrchardKey words: fruit volume fruit elongation fruit hardness ordinal logistic regression Diptera Tephritidae susceptibility Olea europaea Oleaceae ovipositionEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
researchProduct

Bioactivity of Carlina acaulis essential oil and its main component to the olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae: ingestion toxicity, electrophysiologica…

2021

In recent years, botanical insecticides based on essential oils (EOs), or their main components, have received much attention as promising tools for Integrated Pest Management, due to their environmental safety and low side effects on non-target organisms. In this study, Carlina acaulis EO and its main component, carlina oxide, recently proven to be effective larvicidal and adulticidal agents against some insect pests, were analyzed for their toxicity, electroantennographic (EAG), and behavioral responses to adult olive fruit fly (Bactrocera oleae). The C. acaulis EO was more toxic to the tephritid than the carlina oxide, and both were more toxic to the same insect pest than EOs from other …

lure-and-killScienceOlive fruit flyBiologyAsteraceaeAsteraceae; attract-and-kill; lure-and-kill; carlina oxide; eco-friendly pesticide; green insecticide; protein bait; Tephritidae fliesAsteraceae; Attract-and-kill; Carlina oxide; Eco-friendly pesticide; Green insecticide; Lure-and-kill; Protein bait; Tephritidae flieslaw.inventionCarlina acauliseco-friendly pesticidegreen insecticidelawattract-and-killcarlina oxideBactroceraEssential oilLarvaProtein baitQAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationTephritidae fliesHorticultureInsect ScienceToxicityAsteraceae Tephritidae flies attract-and-kill carlina oxide eco-friendly pesticide green insecticide lure-and-kill protein baitCarlina
researchProduct