Cabbage aphid
Cabbage Aphid
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3. Cabbage aphid, Brevicoryne brassicae (Aphididae: Hemiptera)
Host range: All cruciferous crops
Nature of damage:
- Suck the cell sap from tender leaves/shoots
- Stunted growth and poor head formation.
- Under severe infestation the entire plant may dry up.
- When seedlings are infested they loose vigor, gets distorted and become unfit for transplanting.
- Excrete honeydew which attracts sooty mould and interferes with photosynthesis.
- If attack starts early, heavy losses can occur
Identification:
- Eggs: Pale-yellow with greenish tinge.
- Nymphs: 1-1.5 mm long and yellow green with light ash grey tinge.
- Adults: About 2 mm in length and ash grey in colour
Life cycle:
- Active from October to April
- In mid hills of HP it appears in the last week of January with peak during first week of April
- Reproduces through parthenogenetic vivipary however, during severe winter, sexual reproduction also occurs.
- Overcrowding coupled with high temperature and low humidity results in appearance of alates for migration.
- The nymphs mature in 10-15 days and immediately start laying
- There are 4 nymphal instars
- A single female can produce 40-45 young ones.
- Total life cycle is completed in 10-45 days
- Many generations in a year.
Management:
- Cut and destroy the infested leaves/ shoots mechanically as soon as the aphid attack appears.
- Spray of fine pulverized mica powder @ 0.2 per cent to repel the alates.
- Conventional insecticides like malathion (0.05%) or oxy- demeton methyl (0.025%) or dimethoate (0.03%).
- Predators like coccinellids, syrphids and chrysopids; and parasitoids like Aphidius spp also reduce the population.
- Cabbage cultivars like Red Drum Head and KK cross were moderately resistant to this aphid (Lal, 1991) and can be used.
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Last modified: Saturday, 3 March 2012, 5:36 AM