Volume 16, Number 11, 3197-3212, DOI: 10.1007/BF00979619

Stimulo-deterrent diversion: A concept and its possible application to onion maggot control

James R. Miller and Richard S. Cowles

From the issue entitled "Proceedings of the International Symposium: Semiochemicals and Pest Control — Prospects for New Applications"

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Abstract

Considerable basic information has been gathered on the interaction between the onion fly (Delia antiqua) and its host plant, the onion (Allium cepa). An attempt is underway to manipulate ovipositional behavior of this pest by treating onion seedlings with chemical deterrents while simultaneously providing deeply planted onion culls on which onion flies prefer to lay. This bipolar strategy of behavioral manipulation, termed ldquostimulo-deterrent diversionrdquo (SDD), has the advantages of: (1) avoiding severe pest deprival and concomitant overriding of deterrents, (2) combining the effects of ldquopushrdquo and ldquopullrdquo multiplicatively, and (3) providing opportunities for enhanced biological control in sites where the pest becomes concentrated. The suggestion is made that using SDD along with soil insecticide might relax or even reverse selection for physiological resistance ofD. antiqua to insecticides. As tools of molecular biology open new possibilities for manipulating plants and their allelochemicals, applied chemical ecologists should consider arranging situations where the allelochemicals have clear and adaptive messages for the pest. By combining toxins and deterrents at sites where feeding should be prevented, while simultaneously expediting use of alternative plants or plant parts, it might be possible to guide pest evolution toward paths of less conflict with human interest.

Key Words  Oviposition - deterrents - trap crop - behavioral manipulation - push-pull strategy - insecticide resistance management - onion fly -  Delia antiqua  - Diptera - Anthomyiidae

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