Abstract

The coffee leaf miner, Leucoptera coffeella (Guerin-Meneville) (Lepidoptera: Lyonetiidae), is the main pest of coffee plantations in Brazil. Indiscriminate chemical control has been used frequently to control the attack of L. coffeella, causing serious problems to the environment. To avoid such problems, new techniques have been developed to control the attack of this pest. A technique to control lepidopteran pests, called mating disruption, aims to obstruct the communication among sexual partners. The potential of pheromone-mediated mating disruption for control of leaf miner population was evaluated in a coffee plantation in Patrocinio-MG, Brazil. Three experimental areas were installed: 20 ha plot treated with synthetic sex pheromone; another 20 ha plot with insecticide applications and 20 ha plot maintained as control. The pheromone plot was treated with 400 pheromone dispensers with 1g of 5,9-dimethylpentadecane per dispenser. The efficacy of mating disruption was evaluated by the comparison of number of males caught in delta traps (20 traps per plot) baited with 0.5 mg of 5,9 - dimethylpentadecane. The number of mined leaves was also recorded in each plot. The presence of pheromone did not reduce the number of males caught nor decreased the number of mined leaves in the plot. The failure of the mating disruption technique may be attributed to a combination of several factors, such as composition and dose of the pheromone and its formulation, the moment of application in the crop, the population density at the begin of the experiment and climatic factors.

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