CN113767904A - Special attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants - Google Patents

Special attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants Download PDF

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CN113767904A
CN113767904A CN202111033374.XA CN202111033374A CN113767904A CN 113767904 A CN113767904 A CN 113767904A CN 202111033374 A CN202111033374 A CN 202111033374A CN 113767904 A CN113767904 A CN 113767904A
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beta
thrips
ficus
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CN113767904B (en
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黄鹏
余德亿
姚锦爱
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Institute of Plant Protection of FAAS
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01NPRESERVATION OF BODIES OF HUMANS OR ANIMALS OR PLANTS OR PARTS THEREOF; BIOCIDES, e.g. AS DISINFECTANTS, AS PESTICIDES OR AS HERBICIDES; PEST REPELLANTS OR ATTRACTANTS; PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
    • A01N35/00Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators containing organic compounds containing a carbon atom having two bonds to hetero atoms with at the most one bond to halogen, e.g. aldehyde radical
    • A01N35/02Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators containing organic compounds containing a carbon atom having two bonds to hetero atoms with at the most one bond to halogen, e.g. aldehyde radical containing aliphatically bound aldehyde or keto groups, or thio analogues thereof; Derivatives thereof, e.g. acetals
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01NPRESERVATION OF BODIES OF HUMANS OR ANIMALS OR PLANTS OR PARTS THEREOF; BIOCIDES, e.g. AS DISINFECTANTS, AS PESTICIDES OR AS HERBICIDES; PEST REPELLANTS OR ATTRACTANTS; PLANT GROWTH REGULATORS
    • A01N27/00Biocides, pest repellants or attractants, or plant growth regulators containing hydrocarbons
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02ATECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02A50/00TECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE in human health protection, e.g. against extreme weather
    • Y02A50/30Against vector-borne diseases, e.g. mosquito-borne, fly-borne, tick-borne or waterborne diseases whose impact is exacerbated by climate change

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  • Agronomy & Crop Science (AREA)
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  • Agricultural Chemicals And Associated Chemicals (AREA)

Abstract

The invention discloses a special attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants, which comprises the following main components: beta-cyclocitral, beta-element and beta-copaene; the attractant has a good attracting effect, and provides support for making other follow-up effective prevention and control measures, reducing the using amount of chemical pesticides and realizing accurate monitoring and green and efficient prevention and control of insect gall thrips.

Description

Special attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants
Technical Field
The invention relates to the technical field of pest control, in particular to a specific attractant for controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants and application thereof.
Background
Ficus microcarpa is a generic name of Ficus plants in Moraceae, and can be used for pot culture after shaping. The potted Ficus plant mainly comprises Ficus microcarpa, Ficus benjamina, Ficus elastica, etc. In recent years, with the increase of export quantity of potted ficus plants, the expansion of industrial intensive production scale and the enhancement of pest resistance, the occurrence of gall thrips is aggravated, and the gall thrips becomes one of the main pests in the planting process of the potted ficus plants. The insect is hidden in sexual life and is not easy to be found in the initial stage; the gall-making capability is strong, so that the damaged leaves can form dumpling-shaped or lump-shaped gall in a short time; the reproductive capacity is strong, the generation period is short, and large-area outbreak is easy to cause; it can also spread various diseases, and is very difficult to control. At present, the insect is listed as quarantine insect by countries and regions such as European Union, America, silovack, Japan, Thailand and the like, great negative influence is caused on export of potted ficus plants, and how to effectively monitor, prevent and control the insect becomes a problem to be solved urgently in export of potted ficus plants.
At present, an effective monitoring and prevention and control means aiming at insect gall thrips is still lacked in the production process of potted ficus plants, once the insects are found, the insects are formed on leaves, the prevention and control measures are usually lagged, and the prevention and control cost is increased; and the dosage of chemical pesticide is increased, which is not beneficial to ecological environment safety. Plant volatile matters are low-boiling point and volatile small molecular compounds generated by plants through a secondary metabolic pathway, play a vital role in host selection of phytophagous insects, and are chemical clues for searching host plants by the phytophagous insects; because plant volatiles are natural in origin, relatively safe, and do not produce residues and drug resistance, the development of pest attractants using host volatiles has become an important research direction for pest management. Under the background, the development of a special attractant for preventing and controlling the insect gall thrips on the ficus plants is urgently needed, the occurrence and damage of the insect are timely monitored and controlled, and the special attractant provides support for formulating other effective prevention and control measures, reducing the use amount of chemical pesticides and realizing accurate monitoring and green and efficient prevention and control of the insect gall thrips.
Therefore, how to provide an obligate attractant for preventing and controlling the cecidomythrips on ficus plants is a problem which needs to be solved by the technical personnel in the field.
Disclosure of Invention
In view of the above, the invention provides an attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants, which has a good attraction effect on the insect gall thrips.
In order to achieve the purpose, the invention adopts the following technical scheme:
an obligate attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants, the main components of the attractant comprise: beta-Cyclocitral (beta-cyclocitriral), beta-element (beta-Maleine) and beta-Copaene (beta-Copaene); and the mass ratio of the beta-cyclocitral to the beta-element to the beta-copaene is as follows: 5-10:0.3-1.2:0.2-0.4.
As a preferable technical scheme of the invention, the mass ratio of the beta-cyclocitral, the beta-element and the beta-copaene is as follows: 5:0.6:0.4, 10:0.3:0.4 or 10:1.2: 0.2.
The preparation method of the obligate attractant comprises the following specific processes: firstly weighing beta-cyclocitral, beta-element and beta-copaene according to the mass ratio, and then dissolving the weighed raw materials into a slow-release solvent.
As a preferable technical scheme of the invention, the slow-release solvent comprises Triethyl citrate (Triethyl citrate).
The application of the obligate attractant prepared by the method in prevention and treatment of insect gall thistle horses.
Drawings
In order to more clearly illustrate the embodiments of the present invention or the technical solutions in the prior art, the drawings used in the description of the embodiments or the prior art will be briefly described below, it is obvious that the drawings in the following description are only embodiments of the present invention, and for those skilled in the art, other drawings can be obtained according to the provided drawings without creative efforts.
FIG. 1 is a graph showing the trapping capacity of different banyan plants on insect gall thrips provided in example 1 of the present invention;
fig. 2 is a graph showing attractant results of different proportions provided in example 3 of the present invention.
Detailed Description
The technical solutions in the embodiments of the present invention will be clearly and completely described below with reference to the drawings in the embodiments of the present invention, and it is obvious that the described embodiments are only a part of the embodiments of the present invention, and not all of the embodiments. All other embodiments, which can be derived by a person skilled in the art from the embodiments given herein without making any creative effort, shall fall within the protection scope of the present invention.
Example 1
The trapping amount of ficus plant volatile matters with different thrips resistant levels on insect gall thrips comprises the following steps:
materials and methods
(1) The test plants: selecting high-sensitive variety of weeping banyans, low-sensitive variety of ficus microcarpa and high-resistance variety of ficus indica from sandy town of Zhangzhou city in Fujian province, wherein the tree age of the thrips is 2 months, the average plant height is 20-22cm, and potted plants of the high-sensitive variety of ficus microcarpa and the high-resistance variety of Ficus indica, transplanting the potted plants into a seedling culture basin with the diameter of 12cm (caliber) multiplied by 10cm (height) multiplied by 8cm (bottom diameter) by peat soil, and recovering the growth for 15 days for later use. Insect gall thrips: collecting insect gall thrips from the base, breeding and propagating the collected insect gall thrips in an insect breeding cage by using potted ficus auriculata under the conditions of room temperature of 25-28 ℃, relative humidity of 50-60% and photoperiod of 12L:12D, taking the next generation of adults eclosion for 3D, and starving for 12h for later use.
(2) The test method comprises the following steps: and (3) measuring and analyzing the trapping amount of the volatile matters of the 3 ficus plants on the gall thrips by adopting a Y-shaped olfactometer system at the room temperature of 25-28 ℃ under the dark closed condition. Experiment set 6 treatments: firstly, ficus pumila vs air, ficus microcarpa vs air, ficus elastica vs air, ficus pumila vs ficus, ficus elastica vs ficus elastica, and ficus pumila vs ficus; repeating for 3 times for each 1 treated Ficus plant; each group is treated and observed with 60 thrips, which climbs to 1/3 two arms of Y-type olfactometer within 5min and lasts for more than 30s, and is counted as effective selection; each insect gall thrips was used only 1 time in the test, and the Y-olfactometer was changed 1 time for each 5 observation heads; the differences in induced quantities of insect gall thrips in each treatment were compared by t-test.
Results and analysis
The trapping amount of volatile matters of the 3 ficus plants on the insect gall thrips is obviously different; the ficus auriculata has the most trapping amount on thrips, and reaches 31.67-45.67 heads, which is obviously more than that of air, ficus auriculata and ficus indica; the ginseng banyan is second to thrips trapping and measuring, is 25.33-35.00 heads, and is significantly more than air and Indian banyan; the inducing amount of Indian banyan to thrips is the least, only 6.67-15.00 heads, even lower than the air inducing amount, as shown in figure 1. Therefore, the trapping capacity of the volatile matters of the 3 ficus plants on the insect gall thrips is that the high-sensitive variety-the most ficus microcarpa, the low-sensitive variety-the ginseng ficus auriculata is located secondly, and the high-resistance variety-the least ficus auriculata.
Example 2
The relationship between the volatile matter content of ficus plants and the insect gall thrips trapping amount comprises the following steps:
materials and methods
Taking 3 plants (namely 3 times of repetition) of each of the 3 ficus plants, quickly shearing all leaves of each plant, and immediately putting into liquid nitrogen for fixing for 15min to prevent volatile matters induced by wound; extracting and detecting volatile matters of the 3 ficus plants by adopting a solid-phase microextraction method and GC-MS. GC-MS column: HP-5MS capillary column (30m 0.25mm 0.25 um); the sample inlet temperature is 280 ℃, the ion source temperature is 280 ℃, and the quadrupole rod temperature is 280 ℃; temperature programming: maintaining the initial temperature at 40 deg.C for 5min, and maintaining the temperature at 3.5 deg.C for min-1The temperature is increased to 100 ℃ and kept for 5min, and then the temperature is increased to 8.0 ℃ for min-1The temperature is increased to 200 ℃ and kept for 5min, and then the temperature is increased to 150 ℃ for min-1The speed of (2) is increased to 280 ℃ and kept for 15 min; mass spectrum conditions: the ionization mode is EI, the electron energy is 70eV, and the mass range is 35-350 amu. Correlation of relative volatile content with thrips trapping was analyzed by Pearson correlation.
Results and analysis
The relative content of each volatile matter in the 3 ficus plants is remarkably different, wherein the relative content of beta-Cyclocrit ral, beta-Maleine and beta-Copaene is not high, but is in positive correlation with the trapping amount of insect gall thrips (r is greater than or equal to 0.9960, and p is less than 0.05) (Table 1). As can be seen, the influence of the 3 volatile matters on the induced quantity of the fimbria cecidula is large, and the volatile matters are key volatile matters for the ficus plants to attract the fimbria cecidula.
TABLE 1 relationship between Ficus volatile content and insect gall thrips trapping amount
Figure BDA0003246221060000041
Example 3
The attraction effect of the ficus volatile synthetic product on the insect gall thrips comprises the following steps:
materials and methods
On the basis of examples 1 and 2, standards of beta-cycloeritral, beta-Malaine and beta-Copaene (97-99% pure) were purchased, each volatile was first diluted to different concentrations with a slow release solvent Triethyl citrate, where beta-cycloeritral was set at 0.50, 1.00, 2.00, 4.00 and 8.00. mu.g/100. mu.L, beta-Malaine was set at 0.05, 0.10, 0.20, 0.40 and 0.80. mu.g/100. mu.L, beta-Copaene was set at 0.02, 0.04, 0.08, 0.16 and 0.32. mu.g/100. mu.L, and each treatment was blank with fresh air. Then respectively sucking 1ml of suspension solution with each treatment concentration of each single volatile matter, and dripping the suspension solution on 1 small cotton block; placing the small cotton in an open glass culture dish, placing the culture dish in a gas collection tank, and observing the attraction effect of each treatment on the gall thrips according to the method in the embodiment 1; each group was treated with 60 thrips, repeated 3 times. The differences in the attraction effect on thrips were then compared in each treatment using the t-test.
Results and analysis
The attraction effect of the 3 volatile substances on the insect gall thrips is greatly influenced by the concentration and generally increases along with the increase of the concentration; in beta-Cyclocital, the attraction effect of other 4 concentrations is obviously more than that of the control except 0.50 mug/100 muL; in beta-Maleine, the attraction effect of other 3 concentrations except 0.05 and 0.10 mug/100 muL is obviously more than that of the control; in beta-Copaene, the attracting effect was significantly greater for each of the 5 concentrations than for the control (Table 2). Therefore, 3 volatile matters can effectively attract insect gall thrips.
TABLE 2 attraction effect of Ficus volatile matter synthetic product on insect gall thrips
Figure BDA0003246221060000051
Example 4
The luring effect of the volatile matters with different proportions on the insect gall thrips comprises the following steps:
materials and methods
Based on example 1, example 2 and implementation 3, take beta-Cyclocital, beta-Ma3 concentrations were set for both the alien and beta-Copaene standards (Table 3), using the orthogonal Table L9(34) Derived L9(33) 9 proportions (table 4) are designed and respectively dissolved in a sustained-release solvent, namely, trietyl citrate, to prepare the attractant. Respectively absorbing 1ml of each attractant, dripping the attractant on 1 piece of small cotton, then placing the small cotton in an open glass culture dish, placing the culture dish in a gas collection tank, and then simulating a field scene by taking a thrips high-sensitivity variety, namely ficus pumila, as a contrast; the attracting effect of each attractant on insect gall thrips was observed according to the method of example 1; each group was treated with 60 thrips, repeated 3 times. The differences in the attraction effects of thrips galli in the various groups of treatments were compared by t-test.
TABLE 33 volatiles 3 horizontal concentration design (μ g/100 μ L)
Level of factor beta-Cyclocital beta-Maaliene beta-Copaene
1 2.5 0.3 0.1
2 5 0.6 0.2
3 10 1.2 0.4
TABLE 4 volatile concentration L9(33) Orthogonal design proportion (mu g/100 mu L)
Volatile matter proportion beta-Cyclocitral beta-Maaliene beta-Copaene
1 2.5 0.3 0.1
2 2.5 0.6 0.2
3 2.5 1.2 0.4
4 5 0.3 0.2
5 5 0.6 0.4
6 5 1.2 0.1
7 10 0.3 0.4
8 10 0.6 0.1
9 10 1.2 0.2
Results and analysis
The attractant with 9 proportions has obviously different attraction effects on the insect gall thrips. The attractant prepared according to the ratio of 5 to 7 to 9 has a high attraction effect which is 62.78-70.56% and is obviously higher than that of ficus microcarpa; the luring effect of the mixture ratios of 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 is relatively low, and the difference with the ficus microcarpa is not obvious; the luring effect of the ratio 1 is the lowest and is obviously lower than that of ficus microcarpa (figure 2). Comprehensively evaluating the attraction effect of each proportion, and showing that when the mass fraction of the attraction components beta-Cycloctral, beta-Maleine and beta-Copaene is 5-10:0.6-1.2:0.2-0.4, the attraction components are suitable for preparing the specific attractant for the thrips gallica, wherein the preferred proportion is 10:0.3:0.4 (proportion 7, optimal), 10:1.2:0.2 (proportion 9) and 5:0.6:0.4 (proportion 5), and the 3 preferred proportions have synergistic effect relative to a single volatile matter, can efficiently lure and collect the thrips gallica, timely monitor and control the occurrence and damage of the thrips gallica, and provide support for the formulation of other subsequent effective prevention and control measures and the reduction of the use amount of chemical pesticides, so as to realize the accurate monitoring and green and efficient prevention and control of the thrips gallica.
The embodiments in the present description are described in a progressive manner, each embodiment focuses on differences from other embodiments, and the same and similar parts among the embodiments are referred to each other.
The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present invention. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein.

Claims (5)

1. An obligate attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants, which is characterized in that the main components of the attractant comprise: the beta-cyclocitral, the beta-element and the beta-copaidiene are as follows, wherein the mass ratio of the beta-cyclocitral to the beta-element to the beta-copaidiene is as follows: 5-10:0.3-1.2:0.2-0.4.
2. The obligate attractant for preventing and controlling insect gall thrips on ficus plants as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the mass ratio of beta-cyclocitral, beta-element and beta-copaene is 5:0.6:0.4, 10:0.3:0.4 or 10:1.2: 0.2.
3. The preparation method of the obligate attractant for preventing and controlling the cestrum goiter on the ficus plants as claimed in any one of claims 1-2, is characterized in that the specific process is as follows: firstly weighing beta-cyclocitral, beta-element and beta-copaene according to the mass ratio, and then dissolving the weighed beta-cyclocitral, beta-element and beta-copaene into a slow-release solvent.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the slow-release solvent comprises triethyl citrate.
5. Use of an obligate attractant prepared according to the process of claim 4, for controlling insects goiter thistle.
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Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070004686A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2007-01-04 Bengtsson Marie C Attractant for apple fruit moth and other insect pests of apple
CN103493845A (en) * 2013-09-13 2014-01-08 福建省农业科学院植物保护研究所 Attractant for thrips
GB2513534A (en) * 2012-12-13 2014-11-05 Univ Swansea Use of a compound to control insects

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070004686A1 (en) * 2002-09-24 2007-01-04 Bengtsson Marie C Attractant for apple fruit moth and other insect pests of apple
GB2513534A (en) * 2012-12-13 2014-11-05 Univ Swansea Use of a compound to control insects
CN103493845A (en) * 2013-09-13 2014-01-08 福建省农业科学院植物保护研究所 Attractant for thrips

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AVELLANEDA ET AL.: "Rose volatile compounds allow the design of new control strategies for the western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis)", 《JOURNAL OF PEST SCIENCE》 *
MAGGI ET AL.: "Solid-Phase Microextraction (SPME) Analysis of Six Italian Populations of Ephedra nebrodensis Tineo ex Guss. subsp. nebrodensis", 《CHEMISTRY & BIODIVERSITY》 *
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