File:  <giantwhitefly >                                                                          Pooled References                                GENERAL
INDEX                        [Navigate to   MAIN MENU ] 
 
 
| Giant Whitefly   Aleurodicus dugesii Cockerell --
  Hemiptera:  Aleyrodidae     | 
|     | 
                                                                                
           ------ CLICK on photo to enlarge.  To search for Subject Matter, Depress Ctrl/F
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|   
          Many
  ornamental plants are damaged by this whitefly including hibiscus, begonia,
  bird of paradise, lilies, and banana, and has also attacked citrus
  trees.  The wide host range and an
  ability to reproduce rapidly in the absence of natural enemies make it one
  the most serious pest of ornamental plants and home landscapes in California.         
  Reproduction is rapid and population levels may become quite high
  particularly on some hibiscus plants. 
  Young whitefly nymphs produce large quantities of wax, which coat the
  undersurface of leaves.  Whitefly
  adults and young feed on plant sap, removing 
  important nutrients.  This
  causes defoliation; stunting and the plant will die.  Sticky honeydew is also excreted by
  whiteflies while they feed, covering leaf surfaces and other nearby plants
  and favoring the growth of black sooty mold. 
  The insect also spreads into houses and automobiles and will infest
  clothing as well.  There has been
  considerable public annoyance to this pest, which in some people manifests
  severe allergenic symptoms.          Until
  there are natural enemies found in Mexico and established in the United
  States there are two temporary control procedures for the giant
  whitefly.  One is to periodically
  spray affected plants and surfaces with hose water to wash away webbing and
  sugary deposits left by the white flies. 
  If there are ants present around the infestations a second mode of
  attack would be to scatter fire ant bait around the premises.  The baits may be found in most hardware
  stores, and although they were developed to control fire ants in the
  southeastern United States, they are also effective against the Argentine ant
  which at times are found in large numbers in and outside dwellings.  These ants seek the sugary deposits of the
  whiteflies and actually protect them from predatory insects.   REFERENCES:                                                                                              
  FURTHER
  RELATED REFERENCES   Clausen, C. P.  1978.  Aleyrodidae.  In:  Introduced Parasites and Predators of
  Arthropod Pests and Weeds.  U. S.
  Dept. Agric. Agric. Handbk. No. 480, Washington, D.C.  545 p.   Cockerell, T. D.
  A.  1896.  A Mexican Aleurodicus.  Canadian
  Entomologist  28:  302.   DeBach, P.  1974. 
  Biological Control by Natural Enemies.  Cambridge Univ. Press, London, New York.  323 p.   Dreistadt, S. H., J.
  K. Clark & M. L. Flint. 2001. Integrated Pest Management for
  Floriculture and Nurseries. UCANR Publication 3402. Oakland, CA.   Hidayat, P.,
  E. Maryana, Y. M. Kusumah & L. Nurulaila.  2019. 
  Host range and population density of the giant whitefly Aleurodicus dugesii Cockerell
  (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) on horticultural crops in Cipanas-Cianjur, West
  Java, Indonesia.  Southeast Asia Plant Conference.  Bogor, Indonesia 2019 14 August 2019.  Conf. Ser.: Earth Environ. Sci. 468: 
  012008.   Kennett, C. E., J. A.
  McMurtry & J. W. Beardsley. 
  1999.  Biological control in
  subtropical and tropical crops. 
  Bellows, T. S. & T. W. Fisher (eds.), Handbook of Biological
  Control: 
  Principles and Applications.  Academic Press, San Diego, New York.  1046 p.   Kodama, G.  1931. 
  Studies on Aleurocanthus
  spiniferus Quaint.  Kagoshima-Ken, Kyushu, Japan. 38 p. (Abstract in Rev.
  Appl. Ent. (A):  113).   Kuwana, I. & T.
  Ishii.  1927.  On Prospaltella
  smithi Silv., and Cryptognatha sp., the enemies of Aleurocanthus spiniferus, imported from Canton,
  China.   Journal Okitsu Horticulture
  Society 22:  77-80.   Kuwana, I.  1934. 
  Notes on a newly imported parasite of the spiny white fly attacking
  citrus in Japan.  5th Pacific Science
  Congress Proc. (1933)  5:  3521-3523.   Nakao, H. K. &
  G. Y. Funasaki.  1975.  Introductions for biological control.  Proceedings Hawaiian Entomology Soc.
  22:  329-31.   Peterson, G. D.,
  Jr.  1955.  Biological control of the spiny whitefly in Guam.  Journal of Economic Entomology 48:  681-83.   Sawada, E., N.
  Ikeda & K. Tanaka.  1932.  Studies on Prospaltella smithi
  Silv., an enemy of Aleurocanthus
  spiniferus Quaint.  Japan Dept. Agric. & Forestry Bureau
  of Agricultural Materials for Agriculture Improvement 42:  1-28.   Sampson, W. W. &
  Drews, E. A.  1941.  Fauna Mexicana IV. A review of the
  Aleyrodidae of Mexico.  Anales de la
  Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biologicas 
  2:  143-189.   Schoeller, Erich N.
  &  Richard A Redak.  2018.  Temperature-Dependent Development and
  Survival of Giant Whitefly Aleurodicus dugesii (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) Under
  Constant Temperatures.  Environmental
  Entomology, Volume 47, Issue 6, December 2018, Pages 1586–1595.   Smith, H. D., H. L.
  Maltby & J. E. Jimenez. 
  1964.  Biological control of
  the citrus blackfly in Mexico.  U. S.
  Dept. Agric. Tech. Bull. 1311:  30 p.   Windbiel-Rojas, K.
  & Sikes B. Messenger.  2020. Pest Notes: Sooty
  Mold. UC ANR Publication 74108. Oakland, CA.       Chiappini, E., S. V. Triapitzin & A. Donev.  1996. 
  Key to the Holarctic species of Anagrus
  Haliday (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) with a review of the Nearctic and
  Palaearctic (other than European) species and descriptions of new taxa.  Journal of Natural History 30:  551-595.   Triapitzin,
  S. V.  1995a.  The identities of Anagrus (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) egg
  parasitoid of the grape and blackberry leafhoppers (Homoptera: Cicadellidae)
  in California.  Pan-Pacific Entomol.
  71 (4):  250-251.   Triapitzin, S. V.  1995b.  A review of the Australian species of Anagrus (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae).  Russian Entomological Journal 4
  (1-4):  105-108.   Triapitzin,
  S. V.  1997.  The genus Anagrus
  (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) in America south of the United States: a
  review.  Ceiba (Zamorano,
  Honduras) 38 (1):  1-12.   Triapitzin,
  S. V.  1998.  Anagrus
  (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) egg parasitoids of Erythroneura
  spp. and other leafhoppers (Homoptera: Cicadellidae) in North American
  vineyards and orchards: a taxonomic review. 
  Transactions of the American Entomological Society. 124 (2):  77-112.   Triapitzin, S. V. & D. Strong. 
  1995.  A new Anagrus (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae), an egg
  parasitoid of Prokelisia spp. (Homoptera:
  Delphacidae).  Pan-Pacific Entomol. 71 (4):  199-203.   Triapitzin, S. V., R. F. Mizell III, 
  J. L. Bossart & C. E. Carlton. 
  1998.  Egg
  parasitoids of Homalodisca coagulata
  (Homoptera: Cicadellidae).  Florida Entomologist 81
  (2):  241-243.   Walker, G. P., N. Zareh, I. M. Bayoun & S. V. Triapitzin.  1997. 
  Introduction of western Asian egg parasitoids into California for
  biological control of beet leafhopper, Circulifer
  tenellus.  Pan-Pacific Entomologist 73 (4):  236-242.   |