3.Pests Flashcards

1
Q

Give 4 methods of pest feeding.

A
  • Biting mouthparts (vine weevil, rabbit, deer)
  • Piercing mouthparts (whitefly)
  • Rasping mouthparts (molluscs)
  • Sucking through tubular stylet (black bean aphid)
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2
Q

Describe the damage done by Large cabbage white butterfly,

And methods to minimise.

A
  • Caterpillars do the damage
  • Leaves of brassicas, nasturtiums are gradually eaten away
  • Eventually completely defoliated
  • Physical = Cover crops with fine netting to prevent adult butterfly laying eggs
  • Cultural = Manually wash of off eggs
  • Provide alternate host
  • Encourage blue tits by building nests
  • Biological = Nematode sprayed on to caterpillar infested leaves
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3
Q

Outline the lifecycle of the cabbage white butterfly.

A
  • Spring - butterfly emerges from pupa
  • Females lay 20-100 yellow/skittle-shaped eggs on underside of brassica leaves
  • 2 Weeks: eggs hatch into caterpillar larvae which feed on the leaves and
  • June larvae form a pupa (attach to woody stem with silk threads)
  • Autumn adult emerges - 2nd Gen
  • 2nd gen pupa over-winters
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4
Q

Describe the damage done by black-bean aphid

And methods to minimise.

A
  • Most commonly damaged are broad beans
  • Shoots weakened by the aphids sucking phloem
  • Aphids secret sugary liquid (honeydew) that can get infected by sooty mould (Blocks out light, preventing photosynthesis)
  • Growth is affected and seed production dramatically reduced
  • Biological = by encouraging predators ladybirds, lacewings, hoverflies
  • Chemical = Spray with insecticide containing Pyrethrum, or natural fatty acids (Breaks down outer waxy cuticle)
  • Cultural = Removal of host plants
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5
Q

Outline the life cycle of black bean aphid

A
  • Eggs overwinter on woody host e.g. Euonymous europaeus
  • Spring: female nymphs emerge, feed on winter host
  • At maturity they grow wings and fly to summer host such as beans
  • Females give birth to many live young (5 per day)
  • In autumn these live young include males and along with females they fly back to winter host to mate and lay eggs
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6
Q

Describe the damage done by glasshouse whitefly.

And methods to minimise.

A
  • Attacks a wide range of food and flower crops
  • Rapid reproduction - introduced from tropics
  • Stylets - Honeydew on foliage which attracts black sooty mold and prevents photosynthesis
  • Biological – Encarsia formosa parasitic wasp
  • Sticky yellow sheets hung above plants to trap whitefly
  • Quarantine new plants/ check leaves
  • Chemical – Pyrethrin and fatty acids
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7
Q

Outline the lifecycle of glasshouse whitefly.

A
  • Adult lays eggs Eggs – 200 minute white rugby-ball shaped in circular pattern on under side of the leaf
  • Eggs turn black Hatch into nymphs
  • Which then turn into flat scales
  • 3rd instar Pupa and flying adult emerge
  • Adult Lays eggs again 3 days later
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8
Q

Describe the damage done by vine weevil

And methods to minimise

A
  • Larvae live in soil and attack roots and tubers
  • Adults emerge at night and eat irregular wholes in leaves
  • Damage grape vines, and tubers such as cyclamen and begonias
  • Plants have slow growth wilt and die
  • Cultural – encourage natural predators such as birds, shrews, frogs etc.
  • Picking/shaking off adult weevils at night in summer
  • Biological – nematodes can be used on larvae
  • Chemical – Bug Clear Ultra vine weevil killer (ornamental plants in containers)
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9
Q

Outline the life cycle of the vine weevil.

A
  • Autumn Adults feed on leaves and then lay eggs in soil or compost next to roots
  • Larvae emerge white and legless with brown head
  • Dec - Pupate in soil and adult emerges
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10
Q

Describe the damage done by potato cyst eelworms (nemotodae)

And methods to minimise.

A
  • Stunted potato/ tomato plant
  • Yellow leaves turn brown and hang down
  • Cysts on the roots
  • Damage is patchy and increases year on year
  • Use of resistant cultivars such as Maris Piper and use certified seed
  • Remove host weeds (nightshade family)
  • Five-year crop rotation
  • Use young mustard crop as manure
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11
Q

Outline the life cycle of potato cyst eelworm (nematode)

A
  • Spring - Eggs hatch in and larvae invade roots and suck up cell contents
  • Once larvae are fully developed they wriggle to outside of root and mate
  • Female leaves head buried in root and swells
  • Females change colour and form cyst which then drops from the root into the soil where it can survive many years with eggs inside
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12
Q

Describe the damage done by peach-potato aphid

And methods to minimise

A
  • Affect a wide variety of plants - prefer tender plants
  • Sucking stylet - inject a digestive juice - distorts tissues
  • Secrete honeydew - blocks stomata - attracts sooty mold - slows photosynthesis/growth
  • Transfers viruses such as mosaic virus
  • Physical = cover crop with fleece
  • Biological = ladybirds, lacewings, hoverflies
  • Small parasitic wasps
  • Chemical = Insecticide containing Pyrethrum, or fatty acids
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13
Q

Describe the damage done by two-spotted spider mite

And methods to minimise

A
  • Affects a wide range of plants - few plants are completely immune
  • Piercing and sucking mouth parts inject poison into leaf cells, causing localised death
  • Yellowish mottling of the leaf
  • Leaves lose green colour, dry up and drop off
  • Spider mites and eggs can be visibly seen on underside of leaf
  • Biological – introduce predatory mite
  • Cultural – check all new plants
  • In winter clean and disinfect glass house
  • Chemical – spray insecticides containing fatty acids
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14
Q

Describe the damage done by slugs

And methods to minimise.

A
  • Feeds with radula and can scoop out cavities.
  • Completely eat young seedlings
  • Irregular holes in plants, leaves, roots, tubers, bulbs
  • Leave a slime trail from undulating foot

Grey field slug, large black slug, garden slug

  • Biological - Parasitic nematodes watered in spring, penetrate the slug and release bacteria (best for underground infestations)
  • Physical - Place traps such as scooped out citrus halves, jars filled with beer
  • Hand pick with torch
  • Copper tape around pots
  • Cultural - Encourage predators, hedgehogs, frogs and thrushes
  • Chemical - Slug pellets, using metaldyhide (adult) or aluminium sulphate (young slugs)
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15
Q

Outline the lifecycle of a slug

A
  • Hermaphrodite (both sexual organs)
  • Spring/summer - mate and lay clusters of up to 50 pearl-like eggs in rotting vegetation or under pots
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16
Q

Describe how insects breathe.

A
  • Insects breathe through holes in their abdomen called spiracles which lead to an internal breathing system of tracheae.
  • There are 4 spiracles along the abdomen
  • It is these that can be blocked by chemical control methods
17
Q

Name 3 entry points for insecticides into insects

A
  • Waxy exoskeleton/cuticle can be broken down by fatty acids
  • Spiracles allow chemicals in or are blocked by sticky pesticides
  • Digestive systems (via the mouth) take in poison to stomach
  • E.g Acetamprid - foliar spray used on ornamental plants against aphids
18
Q

Examples of pests have a winter host?

A
  • Black bean aphid - Euonymus europaeus
  • Peach potato aphid – Prunus spp
19
Q

Name i) a glasshouse pest ii) an outdoor pest

A
  • 2-spotted spider mite /Glasshouse whitefly
  • Rabbits /Vine weevil /Slug
20
Q

Give example of piercing/sucking pest.

A
  • Aphids. Thread their mouth parts through intercellular spaces, tap into the plant’s vascular system, and feed by withdrawing sap from the phloem.
21
Q

Give example of raspers.

A
  • Molluscs. Rasping, scraping or slicing the surface of the plant tissue and sucking out the fluids from the ruptured cells.
22
Q

Examples of pests that causes damage by biting.

A
  • Vine weevil
  • Deer
  • Rabbit
  • Caterpillars
23
Q

Definition of a pest

A

An organism belonging to th animal kingdom who’s activities have an adverse effect on plants

24
Q

Key effects of pests on affected plants

A
  • Reduce plant vigor - crops/flowers are reduced
  • Reduced decorative effect of ornamental plants
  • Food may become unpalatable due to excrement
  • May secrete ‘Honey dew’ causing soot mold/reduce photosynthesis
  • May transmit disease/ viruses
25
Q

What does complete metamorphosis mean?

A

Complete change from an immature form to an adult form in two or more distinct stages - egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa (inactive) and adult.

26
Q

List key types of Pesticide

A
  • Molluscicides - Kill molluscs, these can never be fully eradicated, efforts should be concentrated on protecting the most vulnerable plants (metaldehyde/aluminium sulphate)
  • Insecticides/acaricides - Used against insect and mite pests (contact/systemic/spiracles)
27
Q

Which Mammal does the most damage in the garden?

A

Rabbit, grey squirrel mole deer

Rabbit :

  • 0.5kg of plant food a day, turf and cereal crops worst affected. Also eat vegetable, bulbs and perennials
  • Can reproduce quickly
  • Control is the responsibility of the landowner
  • Physical= Brick walls or wire fencing, buried 30cm underground and facing outwards at an angle
  • Physical = Sturdy plastic guard around trees
  • Chemical - Repellent such as ammonium sulphate sprayed on bedding displays
  • Use plants not attacked by Rabbits