Push-pull approach could keep Western flower thrips off peppers, UF/IFAS researchers say

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GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Repelling Western flower thrips from Florida’s bell peppers could be as simple as giving the insects a push and a pull, say researchers with the University of Florida’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

A team at UF’s North Florida Research and Education Center in Quincy is evaluating an eco-friendly approach called “push-pull.” It’s meant to push thrips away from the target crop with unpleasant stimuli, and pull the insect to another type of plant grown as a lure.

Initial findings from a two-year study at a South Florida farm suggest that push-pull could help the state’s outdoor pepper growers reduce the thrips threat, said entomologist Joe Funderburk, a UF/IFAS professor who led the study.

The Western flower thrips is native to the Southwestern United States but spread to the country’s Eastern half in the 1980s. The insect feeds on plant juices and preys on more than 500 species, including many vegetables, fruits and ornamentals. It also transmits the notorious tomato spotted wilt virus.

“Western flower thrips is a pretty big problem, and one that’s easily mismanaged,” Funderburk said. “Many growers try to address it with broad-spectrum insecticides and that’s like putting the Western flower thrips on steroids.”

Funderburk said broad-spectrum insecticides kill not only Western flower thrips but also natural enemies and harmless native organisms that compete with the pest for resources. The result: After a brief decline in Western flower thrips populations, the pest comes back in force, and may develop insecticide resistance.

The UF/IFAS push-pull strategy takes a completely different tack:

The “push” involves covering raised planting beds with plastic mulch that reflects ultraviolet light from the sun, to repel the insects. Researchers also coated pepper plants with a light dusting of kaolin clay, making it tough for thrips to feed and breed on pepper leaf tissue.

The “pull” was accomplished by raising rows of sunflowers near the peppers, keeping the rows free of UV-reflecting mulch and kaolin to offer the thrips an appealing alternative meal.

But those sunflowers didn’t provide safe harbor. They teemed with a well-known predator, the minute pirate bug. And they hosted two native thrips species that are more efficient at feeding and reproducing than Western flower thrips, making it harder for the pest to survive.

“These are all natural populations,” Funderburk said. “We are not buying natural enemies and releasing them.”

The initial findings were presented in November at the Entomological Society of America’s annual meeting. The study was funded by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

The research team included Steve Olson, a horticultural sciences professor at the Quincy center; Kara Tyler-Julian, a graduate student at the Quincy Center; Stuart Reitz, a research entomologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Tallahassee; and Galen Frantz and Charles Mellinger with Glades Crop Care, a Jupiter, Fla.-based independent crop consultant.

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Contacts

Writer: Tom Nordlie, 352-273-3567, tnordlie@ufl.edu

Source: Joe Funderburk 850-875-7146, jef@ufl.edu

Photo cutlines

University of Florida entomologist Joe Funderburk, left, and plant pathologist Tim Momol check tomato plants at UF’s North Florida Research and Education Center in Quincy, in this undated file photo. The raised planting beds are covered with plastic mulch that reflects ultraviolet radiation from the sun, repelling a destructive insect, the Western flower thrips. Currently, Funderburk is part of a research team evaluating UV-reflective mulch and other tactics to keep Western flower thrips off outdoor-grown bell peppers. UF/IFAS photo by Eric Zamora

The Western flower thrips is a major pest of vegetable crops in Florida, primarily because the insect transmits tomato spotted wilt virus. Researchers with the University of Florida’s North Florida Research and Education Center in Quincy have developed an environmentally friendly strategy to keep the pests off outdoor-grown bell peppers. UF/IFAS photo by Lyle Buss

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Posted: December 3, 2012


Category: Agriculture, Crops, Invasive Species, Pests & Disease, UF/IFAS
Tags: Funderburk, Ipm, Kaolin, Minute Pirate Bug, Pepper, Push-pull, Sunflower, Thrips, Western Flower Thrips


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