Abstract
Mexican bean beetle, Epilachna varivestis Mulsant, is a pest of snap bean and lima bean in the eastern United States. This pest is susceptible to many insecticides available to conventional growers; however, organic management using parasitoid releases and organic insecticides have inconsistent results. In the interest of developing cultural management techniques such as trap crops or push–pull systems, five bean cultivars were evaluated for preferential host selection by E. varivestis using marked beetles in field cages and open plots. Beetles were marked with a water-based paint pen and their locations on plants monitored over time. In field cages, the purple wax bean, Dragon’s Tongue (DT), was preferred over yellow wax, green bean and lima bean; soybean was the least preferred overall. Recaptures of E. varivestis adults in open field plots progressively decreased following beetle release, suggesting the affinity of adults to disperse despite being on or near acceptable hosts. The two wax beans were equally preferred in open field experiments, partially more than the green and lima bean and consistently more than the soybean. These experiments suggest that DT may be a suitable crop for trap cropping or attract and kill strategies for E. varivestis.
Highlights
Mexican bean beetle, Epilachna varivestis Mulsant, is a pest of snap bean and lima bean in the eastern United States
Epilachna varivestis can be effectively controlled with synthetic insecticides such as pyrethroids and neonicotinoids (Shamiyeh and Mullins 1987, Nault and Speese 2001, Patton et al 2003, Nottingham and Kuhar 2017)
Pest control tactics are more likely to succeed if implemented in addition to a prophylactic, cultural strategies (Gray et al 2009)
Summary
Epilachna varivestis Mulsant, is a pest of snap bean and lima bean in the eastern United States. This pest is susceptible to many insecticides available to conventional growers; organic management using parasitoid releases and organic insecticides have inconsistent results. Epilachna varivestis Mulsant (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae), is an herbivorous ladybeetle that feeds on many wild and cultivated legumes (Fabaceae) This native of western Mexico and Central America (Chittenden 1919, Howard and English 1924) has been a pest of snap bean, Phaseolus vulgaris L., (Fabales: Fabaceae), lima bean, Phaseolus lunatus L., (Fabales: Fabaceae), and soybean, Glycine max (L.), (Fabales: Fabaceae), in the eastern United States for nearly a century (Nottingham et al 2016).
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