4.4 Article

Assessment of color response and activity rhythms of the invasive black planthopperRicania speculum(Walker, 1851) using sticky traps

Journal

BULLETIN OF ENTOMOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 110, Issue 4, Pages 480-486

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S000748531900083X

Keywords

Chromotropic traps; fulgoromorpha; hemiptera; Italy; monitoring; ricaniidae

Categories

Funding

  1. Mipaaft Project `Salvaguardia e valorizzazione del patrimonio olivicolo italiano con azioni di ricerca nel settore della difesa fitosanitaria (SALVAOLIVI)'

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To be effective, management strategies of invasive alien species cannot ignore their spatiotemporal behavior particularly those exerting serious damages to human activities. The black planthopperRicania speculumis an Asian insect that has been reported as an alien invasive species in Italy, where it threatens local plant diversity, including important crops. In our work, we analyzed the activity rhythms of this species through circular statistics and the efficiency of chromotropic traps to capture adult individuals. Captures were carried out in central Italy, where the black planthopper is showing a remarkable range expansion, after its first discovery in 2009. We observed that the species was mainly crepuscular, with a high intersexual activity overlap. Activity rhythms changed between July-August and September-October, with changing heliophany, but peaked at sunset and were the lowest in the second half of the night and early morning. The insects were mostly caught by green traps, particularly in September, which is the period of egg-laying inside the leaves; conversely, orange ones were avoided, and yellow ones captured proportionally to their local availability. Strategies for controlling this species should consider concentrating trapping effort during the activity peak, using green sticky traps to enhance the capture success of each trap, with the lowest impact over non-target species.

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