2015
DOI: 10.1653/024.098.0326
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Occurrence ofTuta absoluta(Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) in the Malnad and Hyderabad-Karnataka Regions of Karnataka, India

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Cited by 28 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Tuta absoluta attained global prominence as an invasive pest in 2006 when it was introduced into Spain (Tropea Garzia et al 2012). It has since invaded other countries in Europe, the Mediterranean, northern Africa (Desneux et al 2011;Mohamed et al 2012), and South Asia (Kalleshwaraswamy et al 2015;Shashank et al 2015;Bajracharya et al 2016;Hossain et al 2016). Tuta absoluta also crossed the Sahara Desert and is now seen as a serious threat to tomato production in sub-saharan Africa (Brévault et al 2014), where preliminary reports suggest it has already reached South Africa, invading Tanzania and several other countries on the way (Chidege et al 2016;Campos et al 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tuta absoluta attained global prominence as an invasive pest in 2006 when it was introduced into Spain (Tropea Garzia et al 2012). It has since invaded other countries in Europe, the Mediterranean, northern Africa (Desneux et al 2011;Mohamed et al 2012), and South Asia (Kalleshwaraswamy et al 2015;Shashank et al 2015;Bajracharya et al 2016;Hossain et al 2016). Tuta absoluta also crossed the Sahara Desert and is now seen as a serious threat to tomato production in sub-saharan Africa (Brévault et al 2014), where preliminary reports suggest it has already reached South Africa, invading Tanzania and several other countries on the way (Chidege et al 2016;Campos et al 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The invasive tomato leafminer, Tuta absoluta (Meyrick) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae), has become a serious threat to tomato, Solanum lycopersicum L. (Solanaceae), production worldwide (Desneux et al., ). It was first detected in Spain in 2006 (Desneux et al., ) and then spread throughout Europe and the Mediterranean Basin (Guenaoui, ; Desneux et al., ), Middle East (Cheraghian & Emamzadeh, ; Campos et al., ), and Asia (Kalleshwaraswamy et al., ; Sankarganesh et al., ; Xian et al., ). The pest spread to sub‐Saharan Africa (Biondi et al., ), including Eritrea and Sudan (Mohamed et al., ), Ethiopia (Retta & Berhe, ), Niger (Adamou et al., ), Senegal (Pfeiffer et al., ), Kenya (Tonnang et al., ), Uganda (Tumuhaise et al., ), and Tanzania (Chidege et al., ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In India, T. absoluta was first reported during 2014-15 in and around Bengaluru in Karnataka (Sridhar et al, 2014) and Pune in Maharashtra (Shashank et al, 2015). Subsequently, it has been reported from several states of India causing up to 90.0-100.0% tomato fruit damage (Kalleshwaraswamy et al, 2015;Kumari et al, 2015;Ballal et al, 2016;Swathi et al, 2017;Rasheed et al, 2017;Sidhu et al, 2017;Balaji et al, 2018). Thus, it is considered as a key pest of closed as well as open-field tomato cultivation which threatens tomato growers and allied industries.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%