Abstract
The distribution of Rastrococcus invadens among different host plants and the impact of the mealybug on mango growth were investigated on 2067 trees in three surveys across all the ecological zones of Benin. The first survey started in 1989, less than 1 year after the first release of the exotic parasitoid Gyranusoidea tebygi. Within 3 years, G. tebygi had colonized the entire area of infestation, and was found on practically all infested mango trees as well as other infested host plants. By 1991, the incidence of R. invadens on the secondary host plants had declined significantly. The percentage of infested mango trees declined from 31.0% in 1989 to 17.5% in 1991, highest populations being found in the coastal savanna. During the same period, the mean percentage of infested mango trees having indigenous predators declined from 42.3 to 20.9%. Average mealybug densities declined steadily from 9.7 females/48 leaves in 1989, with 3.2% of all mango trees having densities above 100 mealybugs, to 6.4 females/48 leaves in 1991, with 1.3% of all trees having densities above 100 mealybugs. In multiple regression analyses, based on 23 meteorological, agronomic and plant variables, the duration of the parasitoid's presence proved to be a major factor. It influenced mealybug population densities and sooty mould incidence, which, in turn, affected the production of new leaves. In all analyses, the impact of rainfall, for example, on the sooty mould or the mealybug was less important than the effect of G. tebygi. The present study demonstrates for the first time on a large scale the impact of G. tebygi on R. invadens and, indirectly, on its main host plant, mango.
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