• Title/Summary/Keyword: Blueberry gall midge

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Monitoring and Environment-friendly Management of Blueberry Gall Midge, Dasineura oxycoccana (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), on Blueberry (블루베리에서 블루베리혹파리(Dasineura oxycoccana) 발생 예찰 및 친환경 방제)

  • Kang, Taek-Jun;Cho, Myoung-Rae;Ahn, Seung-Joon;Kim, Hyeong-Hwan;Kim, Se-Jin;Lee, Seong-Chan;Lee, Heung-Sik
    • Korean Journal of Organic Agriculture
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    • v.20 no.4
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    • pp.607-618
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    • 2012
  • The blueberry gall midge, Dasineura oxycoccana (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), has known as a key pest of blueberries in the southeastern United States, Europe and Canada. It can cause considerable damage to developing flower buds and also injure vegetative growth by distorting and blackening shoot tips on blueberries. In 2010, same damage symptoms were observed on blueberries, Vaccinium spp., in Hwaseong-si, Gyeonggi-do. And, D. oxycoccana was identified from the farms and it was designated as a quarantine pest in Korea. The occurrences of D. oxycoccana and its damages were investigated in the blueberry greenhouse in 2011. Nationwide survey revealed that most of the blueberry greenhouses were infected by D. oxycoccana. An environment-friendly management method for D. oxycoccana was developed by changing soil environment in the blueberry greenhouse.

Attractiveness of Host Plant Volatiles and Sex Pheromone to the Blueberry Gall Midge (Dasineura oxycoccana) (블루베리혹파리에 대한 기주식물 휘발성 물질과 성페로몬의 유인 효과)

  • Yang, Chang Yeol;Seo, Mi Hye;Yoon, Jung Beom;Shin, Yong Seub;Choi, Byeong Ryeol
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.59 no.4
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    • pp.393-398
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    • 2020
  • The blueberry gall midge, Dasineura oxycoccana (Johnson) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), is an emerging pest on cultivated blueberries in Korea. To develop a sensitive tool for monitoring this pest in blueberry orchards, we compared the attractiveness of host plant volatiles and sex pheromone to D. oxycoccana adults. We performed gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) analysis of solid-phase microextraction (SPME)-collected volatiles that were released from blueberry ('Darrow' cultivar). The analysis revealed two major volatiles, cinnamaldehyde and cinnamyl alcohol from flowers; and three major volatiles, β-caryophyllene, germacrene D, and α-farnesene from shoots and young fruits. In field tests conducted in Gunsan, Korea in 2019, commercialized cinnamaldehyde, cinnamyl alcohol, β-caryophyllene, and α-farnesene, used singly or in quaternary combination, were unattractive to the blueberry gall midge. However, traps baited with the known sex pheromone (2R,14R)-2,14-diacetoxyheptadecane attracted significantly more males than the treatments with plant volatiles or the control. No synergistic effect was observed between sex pheromone and plant volatiles. Male D. oxycoccana were captured in the pheromone traps from May to August, with three peaks in mid-May, late June, and late July in Gunsan blueberry fields in 2020.