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Studies on the Coconut Pest, Pseudotheraptus wayi Brown (Coreidae), in Zanzibar.

II.—Some Data on the Yields of Coconuts in Relation to Damage caused by the Insect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

F. L. Vanderplank
Affiliation:
Entomologist, Coconut Pest Research Scheme, Zanzibar.

Summary

In the second of this series of papers on the losses caused by the Coreid, Pseudotheraptus wayi Brown, to coconuts in Zanzibar, descriptions are given in summary form of a number of Government-owned plantations of coconuts on the island, together with the yields recorded over the 12 years, 1944–55. The variation from year to year in any group of plantations is not large, and over all those considered does not exceed 25·8 per cent, of the 12-year mean.

In the plantations on poorer soils, predominantly occupied by the ants Anoplolepis longipes (Jerd.) or A. custodiens (F. Sm.), the vidaka damage rate (V.D.R.) during 1955 varied from 60–80. The plantations on better soils are occupied predominantly by a complex of Oecophylla longinoda (Latr.) and Pheidole punctulata Mayr and the V.D.R. determined on a part of these in 1955–56 varied from approximately 41 to 55, with a mean of 47·1. The mean value of the V.D.R. calculated from 200 localities taken at random in Zanzibar during June–August 1955 was 60·6. Taking a value of 50 as a conservative estimate of the V.D.R. for the whole island, and inserting this in the regression equation Y = a + bX relating yield (Y) with V.D.R. (X), derived in the first of this series of papers, together with the average values of the constants a and b obtained therein, it is shown that about two-thirds of the potential crop of coconuts is lost as a result of damage by P. wayi.

Comparison of the yields from palms occupied by Oecophylla in two of the plantations on better soil with those of the whole of those plantations suggests that about one-half of the potential crop is being lost.

The annual value of the total exports of unconverted nuts and coconut products (copra and coconut oil) varied from £636,254 to £1,008,194 during 1949–56, and the annual value of the total production of nuts, calculated from the estimated total acreage (104,000), the number of palms per acre (50), the 12-year average yield per palm on Government-owned plantations (22·5 nuts per annum) and the market price in 1948–56 (Shgs. (E.A.) 90–150 per thousand nuts), is £526,500 to £877,500. Taking into consideration the lower and upper estimates of the amount of crop lost and of the value of what remains, the minimum and maximum estimates of the financial loss caused by P. wayi in Zanzibar are of the order of £500,000 and £2 million, respectively.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1959

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