INFLUENCE OF TEMPERATURES ON THE SUPPRESSION OF CALLOSOBRUCHUS CHINENSIS L. BY DINARMUS BASALIS (HYMENOPTERA: PTEROMALIDAE)
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Abstract
The pulse beetle, Callosobruchus chinensis (L.) (Coleoptera: Bruchidae) is a serious pest
that develops within the stored chick pea seed and widely distributed in the world.
Synthetic insecticides and fumigants are common management tactics against pulse
beetle, even though they have caused serious drawbacks. As an alternative chemical
method, the use of biocontrol agents like parasitoid has been successfully used against C.
chinensis. This pest is parasitized by pteromalid cosmopolitan ectoparasitoid Dinarmus
basalis Rondani (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) in their larval-pupal stages. Efficacy of
this parasitoid was investigated in the laboratory considering number of parasitoid
progeny, host, dead host, dead parasitoid, percent parasitism and percent suppression at
different temperatures and different parasitoid densities. All tests were consequently
changed with the temperature and parasitoid density. The number of emerged parasitoid
progeny (39.2) and dead parasitoid were minimum (2.2) at 20°C temperature while
maximum (73.8 and 7.2) at 30°C temperature with 6 pairs of parasitoid. The mean
number of host emergence and dead host (0.6) were decreased at 30°C temperature but
increased (12.6 and 6.0) at 20°C. D. basalis showed higher parasitism (99.2%) and
suppression (99.12%) of C. chinensis populations at 30°C whereas lower at lower
densities and temperatures except 35°C temperature. Therefore, temperature and
parasitoid density have the acute potential effects for allowing D. basalis to suppress
populations of the pest, C. chinensis.