4.6 Article

Comparison of Commercial Lures and Food Baits for Early Detection of Fruit Infestation Risk by Drosophila suzukii (Diptera: Drosophilidae)

Journal

JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 111, Issue 2, Pages 645-652

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jee/tox369

Keywords

early detection; spotted wing drosophila; monitoring; infestation risk; chemical lure

Categories

Funding

  1. Cornell University's New York State Agricultural Experiment Station federal formula funds [2015-16-180]
  2. NYS Farm Viability Initiative [FOC 154 001]
  3. NYS Dept of Agriculture and Markets project [C200850]
  4. New York State Berry Grower's Association

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Drosophila suzukii (Matsumura; Diptera: Drosophilidae) is one of the most serious invasive pests of berries and cherries worldwide. Several adult monitoring systems are available to time foliar application of insecticides with the expectation of detecting the presence of D. suzukii before they infest susceptible crops. We tested this by comparing four different trapping systems based on two homemade baits, apple cider vinegar (ACV) or fermenting dough, and two fermentation volatile-based commercial lures, Scentry and Trece. Traps baited with dough or Scentry captured more D. suzukii than traps baited with ACV or Trece in blueberries and traps baited with Trece in raspberries. In blueberries, traps baited with Scentry, Trece and dough provided 11-21 d of warning prior to first detection of fruit infestation. However, these traps were not as effective in summer floricane raspberries. The Scentry lure baited traps detected D. suzukii on the same week as the first detection of fruit infestation and other trapping systems detected the fly 4 to 11 d after the first detection, suggesting the need for an improved D. suzukii detection system in raspberries. Both synthetic lures (Scentry and Trece) were significantly more selective for D. suzukii than dough bait, although the selectivity of all four tested lures/baits were relatively low at <20%. Our results suggest that in locations where D. suzukii adults are not trapped in late winter and spring, adult monitoring of D. suzukii using a sensitive trapping system may provide early warning of pending infestation risk thereby potentially reducing unnecessary insecticide applications.

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