Abstract

BackgroundDue to recent bans on the use of several soil insecticides and insecticidal seed coatings, soil-dwelling insect pests are increasingly difficult to manage. One example is the western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), a serious root-feeder of maize (Zea mays). We investigated whether the less problematic botanical azadirachtin, widely used against above-ground insects, could become an option for the control of this soil insect pest.MethodsArtificial diet-based bioassays were implemented under standard laboratory conditions to establish dose response curves for the pest larvae. Then, potted-plant experiments were implemented in greenhouse to assess feasibility and efficacy of a novel granular formulation of azadirachtin under more natural conditions and in relation to standard insecticides.ResultsBioassays in three repetitions revealed a 3-day LD50 of 22.3 µg azadirachtin/ml which corresponded to 0.45 µg/neonate of D. v. virgifera and a 5-day LD50 of 19.3 µg/ml or 0.39 µg/first to second instar larva. No sublethal effects were observed. The three greenhouse experiments revealed that the currently proposed standard dose of a granular formulation of 38 g azadirachtin/hectare for in-furrow application at sowing is not enough to control D. v. virgifera or to prevent root damage. At 10× standard-dose total pest control was achieved as well as the prevention of most root damage. This was better than the efficacy achieved by cypermethrin-based granules and comparable to tefluthrin-granules, or thiamethoxam seed coatings. The ED50 for suppressing larval populations were estimated at 92 g azadirachtin/ha, for preventing heavy root damage 52 g/ha and for preventing general root damage 220 g/ha.ConclusionsThere seems clear potential for the development of neem-based botanical soil insecticides for arable crops such as maize. They might become, if doses are increased and more soil insecticides phased out, a promising, safer solution as part of the integrated pest management toolkit against soil insects.

Highlights

  • Corn rootworms are, next to wireworms, grubs and cutworms, serious soil-dwelling insect pests of maize (Zea mays)

  • North American growers use transgenic maize expressing different Bacillus thuringiensis proteins which are toxic to rootworms (Levine and Oloumi-Sadeghi 1991; Domínguez-Arrizabalaga et al 2020), but their efficacies under field conditions are variable (Clair et al 2020; Gassmann et al 2020)

  • Foliar insecticides are often broad spectrum and knock-down contact-pesticides with considerable non-target effects

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Summary

Introduction

Next to wireworms, grubs and cutworms, serious soil-dwelling insect pests of maize (Zea mays). Many growers apply granular or fluid soil insecticides, mainly pyrethroids or organophosphates, or use neonicotinoid-coated maize seeds to target the root feeding larvae. Foliar insecticides are often broad spectrum and knock-down contact-pesticides with considerable non-target effects. Many soil insecticides and seed coatings are problematic due to their human toxicity and/or serious non-target or other environmental effects. Due to recent bans on the use of several soil insecticides and insecticidal seed coatings, soil-dwelling insect pests are increasingly difficult to manage. One example is the western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), a serious root-feeder of maize (Zea mays). We investigated whether the less problematic botanical azadirachtin, widely used against above-ground insects, could become an option for the control of this soil insect pest

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