Document details

THRIPS IN OLEAE EUROPAEA L.: ORGANIC VERSUS CONVENTIONAL PRODUCTION

Author(s): Rei, Fernando cv logo 1 ; Mateus, Célia cv logo 2 ; Torres, Laura cv logo 3

Date: 2011

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/5020

Origin: Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora

Subject(s): Olive Thrips; Dimethoate; spatial effects; temporal effects


Description
A study was carried out to evaluate differences between thrips communities in olive orchards under organic or conventional production regimes. Four olive orchards, two under organic production and two under conventional production, were selected in the Alentejo region, south of Portugal. Thrips were collected in the olive canopy every fortnight, between April and November of 2000, by the beating technique and identified. The results indicated the presence of seven Terebrantia thrips genera, namely Aeolothrips sp., Frankliniella sp., Limothrips sp., Melanthrips sp., Neohydatothrips sp., Tenothrips sp., and Thrips sp. Nine species were identified: Aeolothrips intermedius Bagnall, Frankliniella tenuicornis (Uzel), Limothrips cerealium Haliday, Tenothrips discolour (Karny), Thrips angusticeps Uzel, Thrips atratus Haliday, Thrips australis (Bagnall), Thrips meridionalis (Priesner), and Thrips tabaci Lindeman. One morphotype still under identification and Limothrips sp. were the most abundant. Differences in the thrips communities composition between organic and conventional olive orchards were not observed by PRC and Kruskal-Wallis, and a dimethoate spray applied in the conventional orchard, only accounted for 0.4% of the total thrips matrix variation. Spatial (orchard location) and temporal (sampling date) explanatory variables accounted for 0.6 and 13.8% respectively, according to the partitioning variance technique.
Document Type Article
Language English
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