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Field assessment of host plant specificity and potential effectiveness of a prospective biological control agent, Aceria salsolae, of Russian thistle, Salsola tragus

TitoloField assessment of host plant specificity and potential effectiveness of a prospective biological control agent, Aceria salsolae, of Russian thistle, Salsola tragus
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2009
AutoriSmith, L., Cristofaro M., de Lillo E, Monfreda R., and Paolini A.
RivistaBiological Control
Volume48
Paginazione237 - 243
Data di pubblicazione2009///
Parole chiaveAcari, Aceria salsolae, Chenopodiaceae, Eriophyidae, Field assay, Host plant specificity, Kochia, Nontarget host, Tumbleweed, Weed control
Abstract

The eriophyid mite, Aceria salsolae de Lillo and Sobhian, is being evaluated as a prospective classical biological control agent of invasive alien tumbleweeds, including Salsola tragus, S. collina, S. paulsenii and S. australis, in North America. Previous laboratory experiments to determine the host specificity of the mite indicated that it could sometimes persist and multiply on some nontarget plants, including Bassia hyssopifolia and B. scoparia. These are both European plants whose geographic range overlaps that of the mite, but the mite has never been observed on them in the field. A field experiment was conducted in Italy to determine if the mite would infest and damage these plants under natural outdoor conditions. The results indicate that this mite does not attain significant populations on these nontarget plants nor does it significantly damage them. Salsola tragus was heavily infested by A. salsolae, and plant size was negatively correlated to the level of infestation. Although S. kali plants were also infested, their size did not appear to be affected by the mites. The other nontarget plants were not as suitable for the mite in the field as in previous laboratory experiments. We conclude that there would be no significant risk to nontarget plants as a result of using A. salsolae as a biological agent to control Salsola species in North America.

Note

Cited By (since 1996): 2Export Date: 23 August 2010Source: Scopus

URLhttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-58849155180&partnerID=40&md5=6c3eddfd8c654401fb6df72e88b99725
Citation Key211