The capacity of ulvan, a sulphated heteropolysaccharide, to prime the chitin-and chitosan-elicited oxidative burst in wheat and rice cells was tested. Gas-liquid chromatography showed that ulvan was composed of rhamnose, xylose, glucuronic acid, glucose and galactose. It contained very low amounts of proteins and ca. 19% sulphate groups. The polymer did not elicit the production of hydrogen peroxide in suspension-cultured wheat or rice cells. Furthermore, in both cell cultures, the simultaneous addition of ulvan and chitin hexamer or chitosan polymer did not significantly alter the intensity of the oxidative burst caused by the elicitors alone. However, pretreatment of wheat cells with ulvan increased the chitin-elicited oxidative burst about five-to sixfold, and that elicited by chitosan about twofold. In rice cells, the production of H 2 O 2 elicited by chitin or chitosan was strongly primed by pretreatment with the same concentration of ulvan, increasing the burst triggered by the elicitors alone by 150 and 80 times, respectively. Pretreatment of whole plants with ulvan significantly reduced the symptom severity of Blumeria graminis infection, by 45% in wheat and by 80% in barley. Thus, the priming activity of ulvan on the oxidative burst correlates with a decrease of disease symptoms in infected plants. This is apparently the first report on priming activity of a natural algal polysaccharide.
A viscous formulation based on castor oil containing the pyrethroid insecticide cyfluthrin and E8, E10‐dodecadienol, the main component of the codling moth sex pheromone, (Cydia pomonella L.: Tortricidae, Olethreutinae) was developed. The insecticidal performance of the formulation was evaluated in the laboratory using a tarsal‐contact bioassay. The pheromone dosage required to attract male moths to the formulation was determined in behavioural tests performed in a wind tunnel. The efficacy of formulations applied to seedlings of the host plant was further investigated in glasshouse experiments conducted with male moths in small wire‐gauze cages. The laboratory tests resulted in a formulation for preliminary field trials containing 4% cyfluthrin and 0.1% pheromone. During the 1995 growing season, experiments were conducted in apple orchards at three locations in Germany. The formulation was first applied to the bark of apple trees (Malus domestica) in mid May and then again in late July. A good level of control, comparable with a spray treatment using the insect growth regulator Alsystin was achieved. The potential of the attract and kill strategy, combining selective attraction of a pest species with the efficacy associated with a pyrethroid insecticide treatment, as a means of controlling the codling moth in commercial apple growing, is discussed.
Factors affecting the efficacy of an attracticide strategy for the control of the codling moth Cydia pomonella L (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) were investigated using laboratory and field experiments. The sex-pheromone-based insect-control strategy utilises 100-microliters droplets of a sticky, paste-like formulation containing 1 mg g-1 (E,E)-8,10-dodecadien-1-ol (codlemone) as an attractant for male moths and 40 mg g-1 cyfluthrin, a contact insecticide, applied to branches in the upper parts of the tree crown. The longevity of the treatment under field conditions was assessed in the laboratory by biological testing of variously aged samples of the attracticide formulation which had been applied to the bark of apple trees growing in commercial orchards. Electroantennogram responses of male moth antennae were used to compare codlemone release from the attracticide after different lengths of environmental exposure. Changes in insecticidal efficacy of the same samples were assessed with reference to the speed of knockdown (KT50) and the mortalities after 48 h among populations of male moths confined in cages containing samples of fresh and field-aged formulations. Gradual declines in both the amount of pheromone released and insecticidal activity were observed over the 10-week period of the experiments. Various factors associated with the behaviour of codling moths in the field which might influence the attracticide strategy were also investigated. Although the vertical position of attracticide sources within apple trees had a strong influence on their attractiveness, their horizontal position had none. Results of field trials showed that efficacy of the attracticide depends on the population density of the pest. Under the conditions of the current study a density of three or more sources per tree (= 4500 sources per ha) was required to attain satisfactory levels of codling moth control.
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