1. Leaf webber
1. Leaf webber or chickoo moth - Nephopteryx eugrapllylla Rag. (Pyraustidae: Lepidoptera)
|
Damage
- The caterpillar webs together the leaves scrape the chlorophyll and reduced to net work of veins.
- It also bores inside the buds, flowers and some time tender fruits become withered and shed.
- Presence of clusters of dried leaves hanging from webbed shoots and appearance of dark brown patches on leaves and cluster of dead leaves are the typical symptoms of attack.
Bionomics
- The adult moth is greyish with fore wings having brown or black spots and hind wing semi hyaline.
- The female lays pale yellow, oval shaped eggs in-groups of 2 or 3 or singly on leaves and buds of young shoots.
- The fecundity is 374 eggs per female.
- The egg period is 2-11 days.
- The larva is pinkish in colour with three dorso lateral brown stripes on each side.
- It pupates in leaf web itself for 8-9 days.
- The total life cycle is completed in 26 - 92 days.
- There are 7-9 overlapping generation per year.
- The maximum activity of pest is seen during June-July.
Management
- Plant less susceptible PKM 1 sapota variety.
- Collect and destroy webbed leaves, shoots and buds along with larvae.
- Use light trap @ 1/ha to monitor activity.
- Spray two rounds of carbary 10.1% or Bacillus thuringiensis 0.1% or NSKE 5% along with sticking agent or phosalone 0.05% or malathion 0.1% in alternation at 20 days interval from new shoot formation to harvest of fruits.
|
Last modified: Saturday, 4 February 2012, 5:22 PM