Abstract

Olive weevils, Pimelocerus (Dyscerus) perforatus Roelofs, utilize olive trees as a host plant. The adult female uses an elongated snout to puncture the trunk and lay one egg a day, resulting in dozens of eggs over its lifetime. The hatched larvae grow by eating the olive trunk. When olive trees die due to feeding damage, olive productivity is seriously impaired. Since there is no effective pesticide for olive weevils so far, the authors aimed to develop a repellent for adult olive weevils from the viewpoint of integrated pest management. We prepared a measurable apparatus for the repellent action against olive weevils and screened chemical substances by using the apparatus. When the repellent activity was measured using vanillin and its derivatives, a clear repellent effect could be confirmed for two types of vanillin derivatives, such as o-vanillin, and 2-hydroxy-4-methoxybenzaldehyde. In addition, when the repellent activity against olive weevils was measured using monoterpenes, four types of acyclic monoterpenes, geraniol, β-citronellol, citral, and linalool, and three types of monocyclic monoterpenes, (-)-limonene, (+)-limonene, and (-)-menthol, and a bicyclic monoterpene, (1R)-(+)-α-pinene, were found to have dose-dependent repellent activity with statistical significance. In the future, it is expected that the formulation for applying the repellent substances to olive trees and the study of their practicality in olive fields will progress.

Full Text
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