The formicid ant, Plagiolepis sp., as a predator of the coffee twig borer, Xylosandrus compactus

In this study, a formicid ant, Plagiolepis sp., found in X. compactus galleries at the National Coffee Research Institute in 2014, was evaluated for potential to provide biological control of the twig borer. In a Petri dish feeding bioassay, Plagiolepis sp. preyed on all stages of X. compactus except adults within 24h. In field bioassays where Plagiolepis sp. was caged over X. compactus-infested twigs for one month in muslin sleeves, the predator colonized pest galleries and eliminated all life stages of X. compactus as opposed to the untreated control. In a survey of Plagiolepis sp. in 11 districts of eastern, central and western Uganda, the ant was present in nine of the districts with highest levels of colonization (over 18%) of X. compactus galleries in Luwero district in the central Lake Victoria crescent agroecological zone. These results appear to confirm that Plagiolepis sp. is an indigenous predator of X. compactus which invades pest galleries and feeds on the pest in the field. For prospective utilization of Plagiolepis sp. as a biological control agent of X. compactus, studies on the biology of Plagiolepis sp., its mass rearing protocols and factors favoring its proliferation in the field are highly recommended.
Source: Biological Control - Category: Biology Source Type: research
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