Abstract

Four field experiments were carried out between 1999 and 2001, to assess the protection against cabbage root fly larvae ( Delia radicum), flea beetle ( Phyllotreta nemorum and P. undulata), cabbage aphid ( Brevicoryne brassicae) and caterpillars achieved in white cabbage and cauliflower crops by filmcoating the seed with insecticide. The plants were raised in trays of modules filled loosely with a peat-based potting compost. Batches of seed filmcoated with spinosad at five rates and imidacloprid at four rates, and also the combined products, were compared with a conventional post-planting treatment or with seed filmcoated with chlorpyrifos. Filmcoating with spinosad was ineffective at controlling flea beetle and cabbage aphid, whereas it gave a good control of cabbage root fly larvae and caterpillars at rates of 24 and 48 g a.i. per 100,000 seeds. Imidacloprid was ineffective at controlling cabbage root fly larvae and caterpillars whereas it gave a good control of flea beetle and cabbage aphids at a rate of 70 g a.i. per 100,000 seeds. Using high-quality seeds, there was no significant effect on the number of riable plants produced; however, imidacloprid reduced plant weight by 15% at the transplanting stage. The combined application of spinosad and imidacloprid as a filmcoating on seeds is an environmentally friendly alternative for protecting brassica crops against pests that occur frequently.

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