Abstract

Field trials were conducted for two seasons in mango orchards at Nthagaiya, Kenya, to evaluate the efficacy of soil inoculation with Metarhizium anisopliae (Hypocreales: Clavicipitaceae) and GF-120 spinosad bait sprays, applied either alone or in combination, for suppression of the invasive fruit fly, Bactrocera invadens (Diptera: Tephritidae). During the 2006/2007 season, average post-treatment samples showed that B. invadens catches from the control orchards were four times higher than the number of flies captured in the plots receiving M. anisopliae+GF-120. Fruit infestation was 16, 45, 30 and 60% in the M. anisopliae+GF-120, M. anisopliae alone, GF-120 alone and control orchards, respectively. In the 2007/2008 season, average B. invadens post-treatment samples in the control orchards were seven times higher than the treatment with M. anisopliae+GF-120; and fruit infestation was 11, 38, 28, and 52% in the orchards assigned to M. anisopliae+GF-120, M. anisopliae alone, GF-120 alone and control treatments, respectively. Enumeration of conidial densities from soil samples on agar plates showed initial densities of 1.1–2.1×105 colony forming units (cfu)/g of dry weight of soil but decreased to 1.0–1.4×103 cfu/g at the end of the experimental period. Exposure of laboratory-reared pupariating larvae to soil samples taken from fungus-treated fields showed significant reduction in B. invadens adult emergence (25–36%) compared with the control (80–82%). Our results suggest that the combined use of soil application of M. anisopliae and GF-120 spinosad bait spray is an effective IPM strategy for field suppression of B. invadens on mango.

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