Abstract

Watermelon is known to be infested by multiple insect pests both simultaneously and in sequence. Interactions by pests have been shown to have positive or negative, additive or non additive, compensatory or over compensatory effects on yields. Hardly has this sort of relationship been defined for watermelon vis-à-vis insect herbivores. A 2-year, 2-season (4 trials) field experiments were laid in the Research Farm of Federal University Wukari, to investigate the interactive effects of key insect pests of watermelon on fruit yield of Watermelon in 2016 and 2017 using natural infestations. The relationship between the dominant insect pests and fruit yield were determined by correlation (r) and linear regression (simple and multiple) analyses. Multimodel inference was used to define the predictor that impacted on fruit yield the most. Results indicated that, each pest had highly negative and significant (p < 0.05) impact on yield (range of r = -0.78 to -0.92), and that the coefficient of determination (R2) values (which were indicative of the effect of pests or their complexes on yield) did not rise on addition of interaction terms. This reveals a non additive negative impact of insect interactions on the fruit yield of watermelon. This may be due to among others; competition by the pest, phenology, plant defenses or changes in nutritional content of the plant. The need to therefore employ discriminate analysis to ascertain the contribution of each pest to yield loss when multiple pest infest a crop is thus highlighted.

Highlights

  • Crop plants [Watermelon, Citrullus lanatusThunb. (Cucurbitaceae), inclusive] are often infested by complexes of pests with their attendant impact on yield 1

  • Across years and seasons; the results revealed that addition of interactive terms did not increase the R2 values

  • The current finding shows that the impact of the component insect pests on fruit yield reduction in watermelon was not additive

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Summary

Introduction

Crop plants [Watermelon, Citrullus lanatusThunb. (Cucurbitaceae), inclusive] are often infested by complexes of pests with their attendant impact on yield 1. That concurrent infestation by multiple insect pests does not automatically have additive negative effects on yield have been shown by evolutionary researches on wild plants 1. Whether this principle applies to all cultivated plants remains a subject for continuous studies. Aside additive negative effects 4, 5, research findings have shown compensatory or over compensatory effects on yield 1. Studies aimed at investigating the interactive effects of insect pest complexes on fruit yield of watermelon had hardly been conducted

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