Abstract

Refined petroleum products have been used since last century for the control of phytophagous arthropod pests. The response ofHelicoverpa spp. and its natural enemies to petroleum oil sprays on cotton was investigated under laboratory choice/no-choice and small plot field conditions at the Australian Cotton Research Institute at Narrabri in New South Wales. In oviposition choice and no-choice tests, petroleum oil sprays suppressed oviposition inHelicoverpa punctigera (Wallengren) but notH. armigera (Hubner) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae).H. punctigera females laid about seven times as many eggs on the control (water sprayed) cotton plants as on either petroleum oil spray alone or oil mixed with Kelgum. HoweverH. armigera females laid the same number of eggs on both treated and control plants. In field trials, the number of eggs per metre per sample date found on the plots treated with petroleum oil spray was 3.83 compared with 6.29 and 7.82 eggs respectively on plots treated with conventional insecticide sprays and the unsprayed plots. The number of larvae found on plots treated with petroleum oil sprays was 2.9 times higher than the conventional insecticide sprayed plot, however, this was 1.6 times fewer than the unsprayed plot. The cotton yields from plots treated with petroleum oil sprays was 3.70 bales/ha compared with 7.32 and 2.69 bales respectively from the conventional insecticide treated and the unsprayed plots. Petroleum oil sprays had little or no effect on predatory beetles, bugs, lacewings and spiders.

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