Applied Ecology of Stored-Product Pests
Applied Ecology of Stored-Product Pests
dissertation thesis (DEFENDED)
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/94282Identifiers
Study Information System: 112823
Collections
- Kvalifikační práce [20083]
Author
Advisor
Consultant
Stejskal, Václav
Referee
Žďárková, Eva
Táborský, Vladimír
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Science
Discipline
Ekologie
Department
Department of Ecology
Date of defense
10. 9. 2008
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Přírodovědecká fakultaLanguage
English
Grade
Pass
48 6 Conclusions The relationship between the rate of increase of temperature was significant for A.siro, Aleuroglyphus ovatus and T. putrescentiae. By using real temperatures recorded in Czech grain stores, it was shown that the pest mite population increases only during 3.5 months within a typical 9-month storage season in central Europe. This result indicated that control of mites is recommended during these months when pests and allergens are produced, i.e. from September to mid November and in May. The addition of bean flour to the diet was toxic for all mite species tested, as indicated by the suppression of their population growth. Bean flour (i.e. admixture with food in a concentration of 5 %) is able to suppress any population growth, thereby keeping the mite population at the starting density. This is the first report that leguminous plant compounds suppress the population growth of storage mites.
48 6 Conclusions The relationship between the rate of increase of temperature was significant for A.siro, Aleuroglyphus ovatus and T. putrescentiae. By using real temperatures recorded in Czech grain stores, it was shown that the pest mite population increases only during 3.5 months within a typical 9-month storage season in central Europe. This result indicated that control of mites is recommended during these months when pests and allergens are produced, i.e. from September to mid November and in May. The addition of bean flour to the diet was toxic for all mite species tested, as indicated by the suppression of their population growth. Bean flour (i.e. admixture with food in a concentration of 5 %) is able to suppress any population growth, thereby keeping the mite population at the starting density. This is the first report that leguminous plant compounds suppress the population growth of storage mites.