Abstract

Simple SummaryIntegrated Pest Management (IPM) is a science-based decision-making process that uses a variety of management approaches to increase farm profitability while protecting human health and the environment, with pesticides used only as a last resort. An important alternative to pesticides, cultural controls modify production practices and/or the crop environment to reduce pest populations and damage. This review presents the current state of knowledge and implementation of cultural controls to manage the invasive vinegar fly, spotted-wing drosophila, in U.S. small fruit crops. Spotted-wing drosophila causes direct damage by laying its eggs into ripening fruit. Because it reproduces quickly, uses a variety of cultivated and wild fruits, and is highly mobile, spotted-wing drosophila is difficult to manage. Developing effective and economic cultural controls to manage spotted-wing drosophila will help improve IPM programs.Spotted-wing drosophila, Drosophila suzukii (Matsumura) (Diptera: Drosophilidae), a vinegar fly of Asian origin, has emerged as a devastating pest of small and stone fruits throughout the United States. Tolerance for larvae is extremely low in fresh market fruit, and management is primarily achieved through repeated applications of broad-spectrum insecticides. These applications are neither economically nor environmentally sustainable, and can limit markets due to insecticide residue restrictions, cause outbreaks of secondary pests, and select for insecticide resistance. Sustainable integrated pest management programs include cultural control tactics and various nonchemical approaches for reducing pest populations that may be useful for managing D. suzukii. This review describes the current state of knowledge and implementation for different cultural controls including preventative tactics such as crop selection and exclusion as well as strategies to reduce habitat favorability (pruning; mulching; irrigation), alter resource availability (harvest frequency; sanitation), and lower suitability of fruit postharvest (cooling; irradiation). Because climate, horticultural practices, crop, and market underlie the efficacy, feasibility, and affordability of cultural control tactics, the potential of these tactics for D. suzukii management is discussed across different production systems.

Highlights

  • Cultural controls that modify production practices and/or the crop environment can

  • Drip irrigation rizing cultural tactics preventative approaches that reduce D. suzukii pressure, tactics catego▲ Most effective in regions that are arid during theinto growing season

  • High levels (25–50% canopy reduction) of pruning within caneberries reduced D. suzukii infestation up to 80% in California compared to denser canopies; low (8–33%) or no reduction was observed in more humid climates [55]

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Summary

Introduction

Cultural controls that modify production practices and/or the crop environment can. 1. Frequent harvesting and appropriate disposal of overripe or cull fruit reduces potential oviposition sites and keeps populations manageable during the season [39,40] These sanitation measures may have potential for all production systems, they require a considerable amount of labor. Altreduce habitat suitability is affected by the climate of the growing region; for example, hough these these sanitation measures maymethods have allof production they reCertain cultural control canpotential befor used irrespective ofcull farm size, crop, or suzukii. Reduce habitat suitability is affected by the climate of the growing region; for example, vs. Frequent harvesting and appropriate disposal of or cull fruit reduces poreduce habitat suitability is affected by the climate ofoverripe the growing region; for example, cultural control methods are most economic, feasible, and least labor intensive for their

Cultural controlcontrol practices used to manage
Preventative Tactics to Reduce Pressure
Crop and Cultivar Selection
Exclusion
Manipulating within Crop Microclimate
Pruning and Trellising
Mulching and Ground Management
Irrigation
Harvest Management
Postharvest Sanitation
Reducing Suitability of Postharvest Fruit
Cooling
Irradiation and Quarantine Management
Adoption of Cultural Controls in IPM Programs
Findings
Future Directions
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