Abstract

The threat imposed by the bacterial pathogen Xylella fastidiosa to crops of utter importance to European agriculture such as olive, stone fruit and grapevine calls for immediate research against the meadow spittlebug, Philaenus spumarius (L.), the main European vector. Management tools should consider reducing juveniles of vector populations growing on weeds or cover crops during spring as nymphs have limited movement and do not contribute to disease spread. We examined a wide range of insecticides with different modes of action against P. spumarius nymphs in laboratory and semi-field glasshouse conditions. Pyrethroids (delthamethrin and λ-cyhalothrin) and natural pyrethrin (Pirecris®) + piperonyl butoxide (PBO) efficacy surpassed 86% after 24 h of exposure, without significant differences in the PBO amount tested. The inclusion of PBO caused a 3-fold increase in the mortality of P. spumarius nymphs compared to pyrethrin alone. Sulfoxaflor (Closer®) exhibited similar efficacy at 48 and 72 h but it was slow acting and mortality only reached 60% at 24 h. The LC90 was 34 ppm at 72 h. Pymetrozine, spirotetramat, azadirachtin and kaolin were not effective against nymphs (mortality <33%) although in azadirachtin-treated plants, mortality had a 3-fold increase from 24 to 72 h. Our results will help decision-making policy bodies to set up a sustainable integrated pest management of P. spumarius in areas where X. fastidiosa becomes a problem.

Highlights

  • Xylella fastidiosa (Xanthomonadaceae) Wells et al [1] is a gram-negative vector-transmitted bacterial pathogen that can affect more than 309 plant species of 63 families [2]

  • The threat imposed by Xylella fastidiosa to agriculture calls for immediate research on management tools against the meadow spittlebug, Philaenus spumarius, the main European vector of X. fastidiosa

  • We report the results of pesticide efficacy assays under laboratory and semi-field glasshouse conditions, with nymphs collected from host plants in the field and transferred onto a different host (S. oleraceus) for the experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Xylella fastidiosa (Xanthomonadaceae) Wells et al [1] is a gram-negative vector-transmitted bacterial pathogen that can affect more than 309 plant species of 63 families [2]. Four subspecies have been described with different host specificity [3]. It is one of the most aggressive pests worldwide, associated with important diseases in a wide range of plants [4,5] and it can sometimes inhabit the plant without causing symptoms [6]. In 1987, X. fastidiosa was associated in Brazil to Citrus. American countries (e.g., Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Costa Rica, Honduras, Mexico, Venezuela and Ecuador) [8]. The bacterium has been cited in 33 countries on three continents [9]

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