control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

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Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide resistance and IPM Paul Umina Svetlana Micic Laura Fagan

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Page 1: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

resistance and IPM

Paul UminaSvetlana MicicLaura Fagan

Page 2: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Insecticide Resistance and RLEM

Paul UminaCESAR and The University of Melbourne30 Flemington Road, Parkville VIC 3010

[email protected]

Co-authors: Svetlana Micic, Alan Lord, Peter Mangano, Andrew Weeks,

Sommer Jenkins, John Roberts, Dusty Severtson

Page 3: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

The redlegged earth mite• Important agricultural pest in Australia, New Zealand and

South Africa• Widely distributed within southern Australia• Damage estimated > $500 million/year• Can be confused with other mite pests, e.g. Penthaleus

spp.• Thought to be responsible for more insecticide

applications than any other invertebrate pest

Page 4: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Current control tactics• Heavily reliant on broad-spectrum chemicals (often

prophylactic applications)• Attempts at introducing biological control agents• Some crop rotations and grazing management strategies

in pastures• More recently seed dressings and Timerite® package

(however, these still rely on chemicals)

Page 5: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide
Page 6: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Insecticide resistance detected• Redlegged earth mites controlled using chemicals for >

50 years in Australia• Chemical control failures experienced at 1 location• Farmer sprayed 4 separate applications over a period of

3 weeks• Paddock history: repeated applications of synthetic

pyrethroids > 5 years

Page 7: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Mite

  mortality (%

)

103

bifenthrin concentration (g L‐1)

Resistance found to be heritable

Page 8: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

High levels of resistance uncovered

Page 9: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Resistance to other insecticides

Page 10: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Insecticide resistance in Australia• Corn earworm (Helicoverpa armigera)• Diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella)• Silverleaf whitefly (Bemisia tabaci)• Western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis)• Two-spotted mites (Tetranuchus urticae)• Cotton aphid (Aphis gossypii)• Sheep blowfly, lice, grain storage insects……..

• Green peach aphid (Myzus persicae)

Page 11: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Insecticide resistance likely to increase• Spray only when necessary; avoid insurance sprays• Correct identification critical• Weed management (within crop & fencelines)• Pasture grazing management/crop rotations• Rotate insecticides; good understanding of resistance

management (e.g. mixing insecticides)• Inspect spray coverage

“Over use of pesticides hastens pesticide resistance in pests, leads to resurgences of pest problems, can create new pests, increases residues in the harvested product,

and increases off target contamination”

Take Home Messages

Page 12: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Extent of resistance in RLEM in WA from 2007-2010

Svetlana MicicWA Department of Agriculture and Food444 Albany Highway, Albany WA 6330

[email protected]

Page 13: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

2007

Page 14: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

HeadingText

Main Title

Page 15: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

HeadingText

Main Title

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Main Title

Page 17: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Developing and Promoting Integrated Pest Management in Australian Grains

Laura FaganSchool of Animal Biology, FNASUniversity of Western Australia

35 Stirling Highway, Crawley WA [email protected]

Project No: UWA00134, GRDC Western Panel, Practices, Crop Protection, presentation for Crop Updates, Perth, 2011

Page 18: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

-temperature-soil type-moisture-wind etc.

Environment

(e.g. crop plant)Pest

Pathogen

(e.g. insect)

-fungi-bacteria-nematode -virus

Host

Introduction

Page 19: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Introduction

GRDC IPM Project “Developing and Promoting Integrated Pest Management in Australian Grains”

Benchmark current practicese.g. National survey

Examine alternative approachese.g. On-farm trials

Page 20: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Introduction

GRDC IPM Project “Developing and Promoting Integrated Pest Management in Australian Grains”

Shenton College Year 10 student

Wickepin Grower BeverleyGrower

Facey Group & Grower GRDC & UWA

Page 21: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

IPM team:Western Australia•University of Western Australia (UWA)•Department of Agriculture and Food WA (DAFWA)•Living Farm •Facey Group

South Australia•South Australia Research and Development Institute (SARDI)•YP Alkaline Soils Group

Victoria•Centre for Environmental Stress and Adaptation Research (CESAR)•Birchip Cropping Group

New South Wales•Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation(CSIRO)•New South Wales Department of Industry & Investment•FarmLink

Page 22: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Umina et al. 2011. Control of insect and mite pests in grains –

insecticide resistance and IPM.

Trial sites

Wickepin

Western Australia

Beverley

Northern Territory

Tasmania

South Australia

Queensland

VictoriaCurramulka

Charlton

Junee Reefs

New South Wales

Page 23: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods

Plot 1.1 Plot 1.2 Plot 1.3

IPM Con None

Plot 2.1 Plot 2.2 Plot 2.3 North

None Con IPM

Plot 3.1 Plot 3.2 Plot 3.3

None Con IPM

Plot 4.1 Plot 4.2 Plot 4.3

IPM None Con

Bushland area

Road

Control

IPM

Conventional

Western Australia, 2010

Page 24: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods Western Australia, 2010

Vacuum sampling

Page 25: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods Western Australia, 2010

Pitfall traps

Page 26: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods Western Australia, 2010

Page 27: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods

Help....

South Australia, 2010

Sweep netting

Western Australia, 2010 Western Australia, 2010

Page 28: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Results Western Australia, 2010

Page 29: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

MethodsWestern Australia, 2010South Australia, 2010

Western Australia, 2010

Page 30: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods

Page 31: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

MethodsNew South Wales, 2010 Western Australia, 2010

Western Australia, 2010 Western Australia, 2010

1m

10m

Page 32: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Methods Western Australia, 2010

Page 33: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Results

• Heaps of rainfall ☺• Late growth ☺• Low spring pests☺

Canola Yield (not significant)Control 1670kg/ha <

IPM 1700kg/ha <

Conventional 1790kg/ha

Canola density per m2

Harvest Index (control significant)IPM (0.37) <

Conventional (0.38)

< Control (0.43)

Victoria, 2010

Page 34: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Results Crop yield (kg/ha) Canola, Wickepin, WA 2010

Can

ola

yiel

d (k

g/ha

)

Control IPM

TreatmentTraditiona

lConventional

Page 35: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Results Crop yield (kg/ha) Canola, Beverley, WA 2010

Control IPM

Can

ola

yiel

d (k

g/ha

)

TreatmentTraditiona

lConventional

Page 36: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Results

Conventional

Page 37: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

IPM approach ~ $1.35/ha

Conclusion

Conventional approach ~$11/ha

Cost –

Benefit Analysis

Page 38: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Developing and Promoting Integrated Pest Management in Australian Grains

http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/348554/IP M-benchmarking-survey

c/o Helen SpaffordSchool of Animal Biology, FNASUniversity of Western Australia

35 Stirling Highway, Crawley WA [email protected]

Umina et al. 2011. Control of insect and mite pests in grains –

insecticide resistance and IPM

Page 39: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

Acknowledgments:

A special thanks to each one of you here today!

Page 40: Control of insect and mite pests in grains – insecticide

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