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1 October 2001 Effect of Feeding by Larvae of Inopus rubriceps (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) on Development and Growth of Sugarcane
Peter R. Samson
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Abstract

Pot experiments were used to investigate the effect of root-feeding larvae of the soldier fly Inopus rubriceps (Macquart) on shoot production from sugarcane planting pieces (setts) and on growth and ratooning of sugarcane plants. Shoot elongation was inhibited while setts were exposed to larvae, and it resumed when larvae were removed. Infested setts produced a greater weight of roots than uninfested setts. Similar symptoms were induced by mechanical root pruning, suggesting that the effect of soldier fly larvae on setts may be a redirection of growth from the shoot to roots due to root damage. Larvae had a greater effect on shoot production at lower temperature, particularly in cultivar ‘Q151’, which had a higher temperature threshold than ‘CP44–101’. Temperature and cultivar may influence the harmful effect of soldier fly larvae on sett germination by changing the differential rates of plant growth and larval feeding. When growing plants were exposed to larvae, the infested plants were slightly smaller at harvest and subsequently produced many fewer ratoon shoots from underground buds than uninfested plants. Shoot elongation from buds was also inhibited in setts cut from the above-ground stalks of infested plants. Analysis of nutrient levels in plants did not indicate the mechanism for ratooning inhibition, because levels of the 10 elements analyzed were at least as high or higher in infested plants. Infestation was associated with an increased level of sucrose and a reduced level of fructose in stalks. The inhibitory effect of larval feeding on ratooning was not reversed when larvae were removed from pots 10 wk before harvest. However, new stubble produced from infested plants then ratooned normally after a second harvest, provided the new roots were not attacked. The symptoms of larval feeding in growing plants are unexplained, but may be caused by the prolonged withdrawal of sap from roots or the injection of some inhibitory substance by larvae.

Peter R. Samson "Effect of Feeding by Larvae of Inopus rubriceps (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) on Development and Growth of Sugarcane," Journal of Economic Entomology 94(5), 1097-1103, (1 October 2001). https://doi.org/10.1603/0022-0493-94.5.1097
Received: 28 August 1998; Accepted: 1 February 2001; Published: 1 October 2001
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KEYWORDS
crop damage
Inopus rubriceps
sugarcane
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