4.5 Article

Relationships of immature and adult thrips with silk-cut, fusarium ear rot and fumonisin B1 contamination of maize in California and Hawaii

期刊

PLANT PATHOLOGY
卷 59, 期 6, 页码 1099-1106

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3059.2010.02339.x

关键词

epidemiology; Fusarium verticillioides; insect vector; mycotoxins; Zea mays

资金

  1. Pioneer Hi-Bred Int., Inc.

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Field experiments were conducted in California and Hawaii in order to investigate the relationships between thrips feeding in maize ears and fusarium ear rot and silk-cut symptoms. Half the plots in each experiment were treated with insecticides following pollination. Thrips populations within ears were enumerated at six stages of ear development. Grain was examined microscopically and the percentages of kernels with silk-cut and ear rot symptoms were quantified by weight. Fumonisin B-1 contamination in grain was measured by ELISA. Immature stages of thrips predominated, and maximum thrips populations occurred 21 days after pollination. Insecticides reduced thrips numbers, as well as silk-cut, ear rot symptoms and fumonisin B-1 contamination. Immature thrips populations were more strongly correlated with silk-cut/ear rot symptoms (R = 0 center dot 75) and fumonisin B-1 accumulation (R = 0 center dot 53), than were adult thrips (R = 0 center dot 48 and 0 center dot 36, respectively). Silk-cut kernels all had ear rot symptoms and the percentage of kernels with symptoms was highly correlated with fumonisin B-1 contamination (R = 0 center dot 84). Results suggest that thrips are not occasional feeders, but can complete a substantial portion of their life cycle on maize ears. The results also indicate that thrips activity may be a cause of silk-cut symptoms, and this may be the mechanism that connects thrips activity with fusarium ear rot and fumonisin contamination of grain.

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