Abstract

• Late-aged adult female of cacao mealybug is most tolerant to gamma and X-ray irradiation. • None F 1 generation 2nd instar nymphs emerged from 97,384 adult females irradiated at 126.1-163.0 Gy in confirmatory tests. • The treatment efficacy is not less than 99.9969% at the 95% confidence level. • A minimum of 163 Gy is suggested for phytosanitary irradiation treatment of cacao mealybug. The cacao mealybug, Planococcus lilacinus Cock, is an important quarantine pest. Infested commodity should be subject to appropriate phytosanitary treatment, while irradiation is recommended for the cacao mealybug. Radio-tolerance comparison tests were conducted on the crawler, nymphs, and adult females of P . lilacinus at the X-ray radiation doses of 40, 80, and 120 Gy, respectively. The results showed that irradiation had a strong effect on preventing of development and reproduction; the adult female stage was identified as the most tolerant. During the following dose-response tests, among young and late females X-ray-irradiation (20–100 Gy), the late females were most tolerant when preventing F 1 generation 2nd instars emergence was used as the evaluation criterion. Minimum absorbed dose and its 95% fiducial limits to provide probit 9 efficacy at 95% confidence level (100% mortality/inhibition in an estimated population of 93,616 individuals) were 131.5 Gy (122.5, 142.6 Gy) and 144.4 Gy (132.7, 159.4 Gy), estimating from the probit analysis on dose-mortality data of 1–30 and 1–10-day-old neonates laid by late females, respectively. In the large-scale confirmatory tests, a total of estimating 97,384 late females of P. lilacinus rearing on the pumpkins fruits were irradiated with gamma-ray at the target dose of 135 or 145 Gy (measured doses 126.1–163.0 Gy), which resulted in no F 1 generation 2nd nymphs developing during a 6-week post-treatment period. The treatment efficacy calculated is 99.9969% at the 95% confidence level. Therefore, a minimum absorbed dose of 163.0 Gy is recommended for phytosanitary treatment of P. lilacinus in infested commodity.

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