Abstract
Abstract Heterorhabditis megidis (UK211) was applied against black vine weevil (BVW, Otiorhynchus sulcatus ) in potted plants in a polyethylene (2002) or glasshouse (2003) and in field planted strawberries (2003). Both potted and field strawberries were artificially infested with BVW larvae. In a 2002 pot planting in the polyethylene house, a single drench application of 25,000 H. megidis infective juveniles per plant in 50 ml of water in mid September, reduced the number of BVW larvae to 1.8/20 plants. A second application in early October gave a reduction of 0.2/20 plants and in the third application, the following March no live weevils were recovered, compared to the control which had 8.2 larvae/20 plants. In a 2003 pot planting in a glasshouse, similar treatments gave a reduction of 5.2, 5.4 and 0.8 larvae/20 plants, respectively, compared to the control where 26.2 larvae/20 plants were recovered. In an artificially, BVW infested field trial, similar treatments gave a reduction to 2.2 larvae/20 plants in the single September treatment, and 2 larvae/20 plants in the single October treatment. The double (September and October) application reduced BVW larvae further to 1.6/20 plants and the triple (September, October and April) application to 0.4 larvae/20 plants, compared to the control where four larvae corresponded to every 20 plants. There was, therefore, little difference between the single and double autumn treatments indoors or in the field, and it mattered little whether the single application in the field was made in September or October under the conditions of 2003. Early spring application gave a significant reduction in BVW in each of the three experiments.
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