4.6 Article

Sugar feeders reduce weaver ants? drawbacks when used as biological control agents in mango orchards

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONTROL
Volume 177, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2022.105103

Keywords

Oecophylla longinoda; Bactrocera dorsalis; Ant-hemipterans mutualism; Fruit flies; Farmers? adoption; Organic production; Behavior

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The use of predatory arthropods for biological pest control in agriculture can be resisted by farmers when these beneficial insects become harmful to them or their crops. The African weaver ant, an effective biocontrol agent against fruit flies in mango orchards, is a good example of such inconvenience. This study investigated the effects of manipulating the ant behavior by providing sugar feeders on trees, which resulted in a reduction of scale insect infestations, nest abundance, and ant aggressiveness. The findings suggest that manipulating ant behavior through sugar supplementation can help overcome obstacles in using them for fruit fly control in mango orchards.
The use of predatory arthropods in biological pest control in agriculture can generate resistance by farmers when these beneficials become noxious for them or their crops. The African weaver ant, Oecophylla longinoda (Hy-menoptera: Formicidae), an effective biocontrol agent of pests, particularly Bactrocera dorsalis fruit flies in mango orchards in West Africa, is a good example of such inconveniences. We here explored whether manipulating their behavior by providing sugar feeders on trees would (i) alter their mutualistic relationships with scale insects, thereby reducing the incidence of this pest, (ii) decrease nest abundance often considered by farmers to reduce foliage development, and (iii) reduce their aggressiveness. To that end, a field monitoring was launched in an organic mango orchard in Senegal wherein three treatments were compared: (1) mango trees with ants and sugar feeder, (2) mango trees with ants but no sugar feeder, and (3) mango trees with neither ants nor sugar feeder. The population dynamics of scale insects and weaver ants as well as their behavior were monitored over two years. Sugar provisioning significantly reduced scale insect infestations, nest abundance, and ant aggressiveness over time. Such manipulation of ant behavior through sugar supplementation should help breaking down obstacles that hamper their wide-scale use for the biological control of fruit flies in mango orchards.

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