Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T14:40:42.440Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Seasonality and range of fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae)host plants in orchards in Niayes and the Thiès Plateau (Senegal)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 September 2012

Ousmane Ndiaye*
Affiliation:
École Natl. Sup. Agric., ENSA, Thiès, Senegal. [email protected]
Jean-François Vayssieres
Affiliation:
CIRAD-Persyst, UPR HortSys, IITA, 08 BP 0932, Cotonou, Bénin
Jean Yves Rey
Affiliation:
CIRAD-Persyst, UPR HortSys, ISRA/CDH, BP 484, Thiès, Senegal
Saliou Ndiaye
Affiliation:
École Natl. Sup. Agric., ENSA, Thiès, Senegal. [email protected]
Papa Madialéké Diedhiou
Affiliation:
UFR S2ATA, UGB, BP 234, Saint Louis, Senegal
Cheikh Tidiane Ba
Affiliation:
Dep. Anim. Biol., FST, UCAD, Dakar, Senegal
Paterne Diatta
Affiliation:
École Natl. Sup. Agric., ENSA, Thiès, Senegal. [email protected]
*
*Correspondence and reprints
Get access

Abstract

Introduction. Senegal producesup to 150,000 t of fruit, of which 60,000 t are mangoes. Fruit productionis important for the Niayes region, where 60% of total productionis of mangoes, with citrus production coming next at 24%. Mango losseshave become more substantial since the arrival of Bactrocerainvadens in Senegal. The pest population increases in the mangoripening period, but little is known about its secondary hosts. Materialsand methods. Fruits of cultivated and wild plants were collectedregularly from April to December 2008 inside and around 19 orchards ineleven localities in the Niayes and Thiès areas in Senegal. Thesamples were monitored to identify any fruit flies present so thata list of host plants could be compiled. For mango, the study focusedon establishing the influence of certain parameters such as thevariety, the fruit size, the color, the flowering pattern and thephysiological levels of infestation due to B. invadens andCeratitis cosyra. Orchards were classified either as traditional (manymango varieties and many fruit species grown together in a stand) orintensive (fields of monovarietal mango trees), according to theircomposition and how they were managed. Results and discussion.A total of 663.2 kg of fruit, including those of 24 mango varieties,13 citrus species with five lime varieties, two orange varietiesand four pomelo varieties along with other cultivated and wild plants,were sampled both as fallen fruit and from the trees. Traditional orchardswere more infested than the modern ones. B. invadens was significantlydominant over the other flies emerging such as C. cosyra, C. capitata, C. punctata, C. bremii,Bactrocera cucurbitae, Capparimyia bipustulata, Carpomyia sp. and Dacus sp.B. invadens wasfound on the 24 varieties of Mangifera indica,the 13 citrus species, and the other cultivatedplants and wild plants sampled. Some host plants supported a relativelyhigh level of fruit flies before the mango ripening period. Mangifera indica wasinfested principally by B. invadens and C. cosyra. C. cosyra was significantly present on the firstfruit trees to flower, mostly in early varieties, while B.invadens infested all the varieties whatever the fruitdevelopment stage, the color, or the flowering pattern. Conclusion.Because of the host plants' diversity and varieties the traditionalorchards were more infested than the modern ones. The managementof this pest needs an Integrated Pest Management system based ona back-to-basics study of the infesting fruit flies, existing parasitoidsand their hosts.

Type
Original article
Copyright
© 2012 Cirad/EDP Sciences

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Touré Fall S., Fall A.S., Cités horticoles en sursis ? L'agriculture urbaine dans les grandes Niayes au Sénégal, CRDI, Ottawa, Canada, 2001, 120 p.
Rey J.-Y., Dia M.L., Mangues : des vergers villageois aux nouvelles plantations d’exportation, in: Duteurtre G., Faye M.D., Dieye P.N. (Eds.), L’agriculture sénégalaise à l’épreuve du marché, ISRA-Karthala, Dakar, Sénégal, 2010, 257–279.
Ternoy J., Poublanc C., Diop M., Nugawela P., La chaîne de valeurs mangue au Sénégal : analyse et cadre stratégique d’initiatives pour la croissance de la filière, Unité BDS du programme USAID Croissance économique, Dakar, Sénégal, Sept. 2006, 90 p.
Vayssières, J.-F., Vannière, H., Guèye, P.S., Barry, O., Hanne, A.M., Korié, S., Niassy, A., Ndiaye, M., Delhove, G., Preliminary inventory of fruit fly species (Diptera, Tephritidae) in mango orchards in the Niayes region, Senegal, in 2004, Fruits 66 (2011) 91107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Meyer, M., Revision of the subgenus Ceratitis (Ceratalaspis) Hancock [Diptera, Tephritidae], Bull. Entomol. Res. 88 (1998) 257290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norrbom, A.L., Carroll L.E., Thompson F.C., White I.M., Freidberg A., Systematic database of names, in: Thompson F.C. (Ed.), Fruit Fly Expert Identification System and Systematic Information Database, Backhuys Publ., Leiden, Neth., 1999, 65–251.
Mwatawala, M.W., De Meyer, M., Makundi, R.H., Maerere, A.P., Seasonality and host utilization of the invasive fruit fly, Bactrocera invadens (Dipt., Tephritidae) in central Tanzania, J. Appl. Entomol. 130 (9–10) (2006) 530537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ekesi, S., Nderitu, P.W., Rwomushana, I., Field infestation, life history and demographic parameters of the fruit fly Bactrocera invadens (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Africa, Bull. Entomol. Res. 96 (8) (2006) 379386.Google Scholar
Vayssières, J.-F., Goergen, G., Lokossou, O., Dossa, P., Akponon, C., A new Bactrocera species in Benin among mango fruit flies (Diptera Tephritidae) species, Fruits 60 (2005) 371377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goergen, G., Vayssières, J.-F., Gnanvossou, D., Tindo, M., Bactrocera invadens (Diptera: Tephritidae), a new invasive fruit fly pest for the afrotropical region: host plant range and distribution in West and Central Africa, Environ. Entomol. 40 (4) (2011) 844854.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cissé I., Utilisation des pesticides dans le système de production horticole dans la zone des Niayes : les produits et leurs impacts sur la nappe phréatique, Thesis, Géogr., Fac. Lettres, UCAD, Dakar, Sénégal, 2000, 187 p.
Cissé I., Fall S.T., Akinbamijo O.O., Diop Y.M., Adediran S.A., L’utilisation des pesticides et leurs incidences sur la contamination des nappes phréatiques dans la zone des Niayes au Sénégal, in: Akimbamijo O.O., Fall S.T., Smith O.B., Advances in crop-livestock integration in West African cities, CRDI, Ottawa, Canada, 2002, 85–100.
Ba A.T., Madsen J.E., Sambou B., Flore, végétation et biodiversité au Sahel, AAU Rep. 39, Bot. Inst., Univ. AARHUS, Aarhus Univ. Press, Denmark, 1998.
Anon., CONSERE, Expérience sénégalaise en matière de lutte contre la désertification, Conf. Mond. Désertification, 1997, 70 p.
Drew, R.A.I., Tsuruta, K., White, I.M., A new species of pest fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae: Dacinae) from Sri Lanka and Africa, Afr. Entomol. 13 (2005) 149154.Google Scholar
Ndzana, A.F.X., Woin, N., Kouodiekong, L., Quilici, S., Vayssières, J.-F., Inventaire des espèces de mouches des fruits sur goyave dans la région de Yaoundé au Cameroun, Fruits 63 (1) (2008) 1926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mwatawala M.W., De Meyer M., Makundi R.H., Maerere A.P., Host range and distribution of fruit-infesting pestiferous fruit flies (Diptera, Tephritidae) in selected areas of Central Tanzania, Bull. Entomol. Res. (2009) 1–13.
Vayssières, J.-F., Sinzogan, A., Adandonon, A., Korie, S., Diversity of fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) species associated with Citrus crops (Rutaceae) in southern Benin in 2008-2009, Int. J. Biol. Chem. Sci. 4 (2010) 18811897.Google Scholar
Hancock, D.L., Notes on some African Ceratitinae (Diptera: Tephritidae) with special reference to the Zimbabwean fauna, Trans. Zimb. Sci. Assoc. 63 (1987) 4757.Google Scholar
White I.M., Elson-Harris M., Fruit flies of significance: their identification and bionomics, Cab Int., Aciar, Redwood Press, Melksham, U.K., 1992, 601 p.
De Meyer, M., Copeland, R.S., Lux, S.A., Mansell, M., Quilici, S., Wharton, R., White, I.M., Zenz, N., Annotated check list of host plants for afrotropical fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) of the genus Ceratitis, Doc. Zool., Mus. R. Afr. Cent. 27 (2002) 191. Google Scholar
Noussourou M., Diarra B., Lutte intégrée contre les mouches des fruits, Sahel IPM (1995) 2–13.
Vayssières, J.-F., Sanogo, F., Noussourou, M., Inventaire des espèces de mouches des fruits (Diptera : Tephritidae) inféodées au manguier au Mali et essais de lutte raisonnée, Fruits 59 (2004) 114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malio, E., Observations on the mango fruit fly Ceratitis cosyra in the Coast Province, Kenya, Kenya Entomol. Newsl. 19 (7) (1979).Google Scholar
Awadallah, A., Selim, O.F., Fouda, S., Hashem, A.G., The chemical control of Ziziphus fruit fly, Carpomyia incomplete Becker in the Assiut area, Agric. Res. Rev. 53 (1975) 123125.Google Scholar
Hendel F., Trypetidae, in: Lindner E. (Ed.), Die Fliegen der Palaearktischen Region, Vol. 5, Lieferung 49, SchweizerbartÖschen Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttg., Ger., 1927, 221 p.
Vayssières, J.F., Carel, Y., Les Dacini (Diptera : Tephritidae) inféodées aux Cucurbitaceae à la Réunion : gamme de plantes hôtes et stades phénologiques préférentiels des fruits au moment de la piqûre pour des espèces cultivées, Ann. Soc. Entomol. Fr. 35 (1999) 197202.Google Scholar
Vayssières, J.-F., Korie, S., Coulibaly, O., Temple, L., Boueyi, S.P., The mango tree in central and northern Benin: cultivar inventory, yield assessment, infested stages and loss due to fruit flies (Diptera Tephritidae), Fruits 63 (2008) 335348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Syed R.A., Studies on the ecology of some important species of fruit flies and their natural enemies in West Pakistan, CIBC, Commonw. Agric. Bureau, U.K., 1969, 12 p.
Verghese A., Madhura H.S., Jayanthi P.D.K., Stonehouse J.M., Fruit flies of economic significance in India with special reference to Bactrocera dorsalis Hendel, in: Barnes B., Addison M. (Eds.), Proc. 6th Int. Symp. Fruit Flies of Economic Importance, May 2002, Stellenbosch, S. Afr., 2003, 6–10.
Prokopy, R.J., Koyama, J., Oviposition site partitioning in Dacus cucurbitae, Entomol. Exp. Appl. 31 (1982) 428432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, B.S., The biology of dacine fruit flies, Annu. Rev. Entomol. 32 (1987) 115144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drew R.A.I., Lloyd A., Bacteria associated with fruit flies and their host plants, in: Robinson G., Hooper A.S. (Eds.), Fruit flies: their biology, natural enemies, and control, World crop pests, Elsevier, Amst., Neth., 1989, 129–140.
Vayssières, J.-F., Korie, S., Ayegnon, D., Correlation of fruit fly (Diptera Tephritidae) infestation of major mango cultivars in Borgou (Benin) with abiotic and biotic factors and assessment of damage, Crop Protect. 28 (2009) 477488.CrossRefGoogle Scholar