Twenty-five Years of Research Experience with the Sterile Insect Technique and Area-Wide Management of Codling Moth, Cydia pomonella (L.), in Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Historical Background
3. Research Areas Arising from Operational Challenges
3.1. Mass Rearing Strategy, Handling, and Quality Control
3.2. Radiation Dose, Competitiveness, and Inherited Sterility
3.3. Overflooding, Synchronicity of Supply, and Mating of Sterile Moths
3.4. Spatial Relationships and Adult Flight
3.5. Reinfestation and Ecological Factors Acting at Low Population Levels
3.6. Diapause and Climatic Effects on Competitiveness and Mating of Sterile Males
3.7. Area-Wide Management Techniques Employed in B.C.
3.8. Assessment of Insect Populations and Damage, Program Results, and Response Time
3.9. Other Pests
3.10. Future Research
- Development of assays for measurement of critical attributes of field performance of mass-reared sterile moths and related assays for quality control in the rearing facility.
- Improved understanding of the effect of releasing sterile females together with males and the positive or negative effect of females in disrupting wild or sterile male orientation, or in acting as sperm sinks for wild or sterile males, particularly if future genetic methods permit single-sex releases.
- Knowledge of the ecology of wild moths at very low population levels or under an SIT programme, and of the cause of the local aggregations and persistent populations observed regularly in program operations [56].
- Knowledge of dispersal and movement of sterile moths in fragmented landscapes and how sterile and wild moths react to cues within their environment that lead to population aggregations. Sterile moths must find and act on aggregated populations of wild moths.
- When evaluating systems for inducing sterility, such as genetically modified insects, or novel moth delivery systems like drones, is there an increased interaction with wild moths or in mating success of sterile moths, relative to other systems? Especially at low population levels, when finding aggregations is critical?
- Population genetics and molecular tools suitable for the determination of origin of trapped moths (mass-reared or wild populations), any degree of population mixing, and identification of F1 moths originating from mass-reared colony crosses.
- Knowledge of the degree to which diapause and voltinism may affect the management of codling moth populations and be minimised by appropriate strategies of rearing or release. Can the SIT be altered to function in a cost-effective manner in regions with both cold and hot seasons, or is it best confined to warm climate regions, as are most of the SIT programs operating presently?
4. Discussion and Recommendations
- Replacement of a mass-rearing colony every two years, using a total colony replacement because of the likely selection against introduced genes if only augmenting wild moths to an existing colony. Development should be a continuous process acting in parallel with regular mass rearing so as to sustain service, because in our experience it can require two years to multiply to the necessary size for use.
- Development of assays for measurement of sterile moths by attributes that are critical for field performance and their linkage to assays that can be performed in a laboratory or rearing facility. Comparison of the quality of sterile colony moths against wild moths is critical in field tests of mark–recapture and mating, and is required when developing a new colony. Testing can more easily occur in a region with natural levels of wild moth populations than where an SIT programme is active.
- A recommended radiation dose for C. pomonella of 250 Gy. Use of reduced doses has not proven to improve activity and mating competitiveness of sterile moths during spring, critical to success against the overwintered generation of wild moths, but may cause problems of interpretation.
- A high intensity trap monitoring effort in spring, using at least 2.5 traps per ha, containing low load pheromone lures (10 to 100 micrograms), female kairomones, or related attractants [168] to identify local aggregations or “hot spots” [165], so as to deploy additional targeted or control efforts during the critical spring generation.
- The frequency of sterile moth release should be twice weekly, or more, per site. The most successful periods for the OK SIR program to date, 1995–2003 [2], and for pilot low-release projects [71,107], occurred when applying 4000 moths per ha (or less according to trap captures, infestation history, etc.), twice each week, for a total of 8000 moths per ha week. A high frequency is most useful in inclement weather, as in spring. Unstable weather, especially wind and rain, reduces the dispersal and flight of moths from the wet ground cover where they are deposited. If sterile moth supply is limited, our experience has shown that it is better to release twice weekly than once weekly. It is easier to ensure high sterile–wild ratios by targeting twice weekly [71,107], or daily [34], according to trap captures, than weekly.
- Use supplementary technologies where necessary to reduce wild moth populations in spring. Presently, the program requires supplementary use of insecticide or pheromone-based mating disruption products, and the use of multispecies products [197] is preferable. Use of supplements in spring, and limiting the release of sterile moths to the summer period only, is cost-effective [52,63].
- A strong and continued management effort is essential in non-commercial or urban sites to reduce populations on an area-wide basis, to a minimum of 200 m, preferably up to 1.5 km, from orchards.
- Replace annual harvest damage estimates by assessment of overwintering larval densities, which provides a direct measure of population density and of programme progress. Use a systematic program of cardboard banding applied to all orchards over a two or three year period; at minimum, banding should be in all problem orchards, each generation.
- At intervals, assessments of effectiveness must include pesticide use data for a representative sample of sites, in order to understand the control effort. Otherwise, it is impossible to assess the impact of any strategy on moth populations, nor to assess economic and environmental costs and benefits.
- Mathematical models should be designed with consideration to field experiences, including the avoidance of the effect of SIT where local aggregations of larvae result in immediate mating of wild moths; or on major parts of the spring generation of wild moths due to weather or asynchrony in mating; or on the summer generation owing to immediate diapause of a portion of the spring cohort; and with appropriate values for biological parameters.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Thistlewood, H.M.A.; Judd, G.J.R. Twenty-five Years of Research Experience with the Sterile Insect Technique and Area-Wide Management of Codling Moth, Cydia pomonella (L.), in Canada. Insects 2019, 10, 292. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects10090292
Thistlewood HMA, Judd GJR. Twenty-five Years of Research Experience with the Sterile Insect Technique and Area-Wide Management of Codling Moth, Cydia pomonella (L.), in Canada. Insects. 2019; 10(9):292. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects10090292
Chicago/Turabian StyleThistlewood, Howard M. A., and Gary J. R. Judd. 2019. "Twenty-five Years of Research Experience with the Sterile Insect Technique and Area-Wide Management of Codling Moth, Cydia pomonella (L.), in Canada" Insects 10, no. 9: 292. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects10090292
APA StyleThistlewood, H. M. A., & Judd, G. J. R. (2019). Twenty-five Years of Research Experience with the Sterile Insect Technique and Area-Wide Management of Codling Moth, Cydia pomonella (L.), in Canada. Insects, 10(9), 292. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects10090292