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| COCONUT SCALE     Aspidiotus destructor Signoret -- Homoptera, Diaspididae   (Contacts)     ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge &
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          Coconut scale
  prefers the underside of leaves where it sucks plant juices.  Severe infestations forms a continuous
  overlapping crust of thousands of scales per leaf, resulting in the leaf turning
  yellow, withering and sometimes dying. 
  By 1927 in spite of rigid quarantines, coconut scale had spread to
  nearly all of the Fiji islands and was the most serious pest of coconut in
  Fiji since coconut moth.  In 1926 an
  attempt was made to secure additional natural enemies from Java.  Dr. T. H. C. Taylor was given the
  assignment, which was plagued with transportation difficulties because of the
  lengthy sea voyage and the paucity of ships sailing from Java to Fiji.  However, Taylor was able to make arrangements
  to ship his parasitoids and predators on a vessel carrying a cargo of other
  organisms to Fiji:  laborers from
  India.  The steamer Ganges out of India, stopped in
  Java on January 1, 1927 and sailed on to Fiji on January 2 with Taylor and
  his infested coconut palms in Wardian cages. 
  Three weeks later they arrived in Fiji, but a severe outbreak of
  smallpox on board prevented the shipment from being landed at Suva, but
  rather on the quarantine island of Nukulau, where the insects had to be
  tended for another five weeks with poor rearing facilities and limited stocks
  of scales.  Therefore, although some
  parasitoids and predators were colonized on Nukulau and later around Suva and
  some recoveries made, no permanent establishment occurred (DeBach 1974).          Following 1927, it
  was evident that the natural enemies from Java either were ineffective or
  were not established.  Therefore, J.
  D. Tothill, then Director of Agriculture for Fiji, assigned Taylor to go to
  Trinidad to investigate several species of laydbird beetles which Urich had
  recorded as being important factors in the control of coconut scale there
  (DeBach 1974).  Taylor began his work
  in Trinidad in September 1927 with a survey of the natural enemies present.  He found five species of ladybird beetles
  to be somewhat common and effective, even though at times they were heavily
  attacked by parasitoids.  These latter
  he subsequently took care to exclude from the shipments that he made to Fiji.  By January 28, 1928, his collections of
  ladybird beetles and stocks of scale-infested palms were ready and were
  loaded on board ship.  Nine large
  cages were used, holding 6-8 or more infested young palms.  Three newly designed extra large cages
  required four men to lift and more them. 
  Additional food for the predators in the form of 80 heavily
  scale-infested young palms were carried along in 5-gal. tins.  All had to be carefully arranged to
  protect them from rough handling and damage from salt water during the voyage.          Although the
  initial predator stocks were limited to 200 adult beetles, plus some larvae
  and pupae per cage, the predators increased so rapidly during the voyage that
  many had to be removed to keep them from completely eliminating the food
  supply and thus starving to death before arrival in Fiji.  Trans shipment of the stock was made at
  Panama on February 1, 1928 to a steamer going via Tahiti to Suva, Fiji, the
  entire trip taking a little more than five weeks.  All five species of ladybird beetles arrived in Fiji in
  sufficient numbers to enable culture, but more than twice as many Cryptognatha nodiceps Mshl (1,517) as
  compared to all of the other four species (746) cultured, which may have been
  an indication of the ultimate dominant role played by C. noticeps.            Insectary culture in
  Fiji was difficult, so a method was devised of breeding in the field within
  cloth sleeve covered, heavily infested banana leaves.  In each sleeve, starting with 20 beetles,
  about 300 would be recovered in one month's time, a return of 15:1 with
  minimum expense and labor.  By
  September 1928 only C. nodiceps was cultured small
  numbers remaining of the other four species were liberated.  Some of the latter became temporarily
  established but eventually disappeared. 
            The coconut scale
  problem was reduced to non-economic levels on all important islands in Fiji
  within nine months.  After 18 months
  the scale was so rare if was difficult to find.  During the peak of the reductions, adult beetles and larvae
  swarmed on every tree and the adults could be readily seen flying around in
  the air.  The trees changed from
  yellow to bright green.  When Taylor
  published his report of this success in 1935, not a single new outbreak had
  occurred.  The same results occurred
  on all host plants, many of which had been as badly infested as coconuts
  (Taylor 1935).  DeBach (1974) reported
  that he visited Fiji in 1969 and found hardly any coconut scale, even though
  an occasional Cryptognatha
  adult was seen rapidly searching the clean leaves.  He stated it is evidently an excellent
  searcher that can survive at very low host densities like the vedalia
  beetle.  Additionally it probably
  feeds on alternative host scales on other host plants.  DeBach (1974) found the Aphytis mentioned earlier as
  being rather common on coconut scale in Fiji.  Out of only one light infestation of the scale on avocado,
  parasitization by Aphytis
  was considerable, and he thought that some credit also might be given to the
  parasitoid (DeBach 1974).          In Mauritius Chilocorus politus and C. nigritus eliminated the threat of coconut scale to
  plantations.  Spectacular control of
  coconut scale was achieved in New Hebrides as a result of Rhizobius pulchellus Montrozier (Cochereau 1965).  See Rosen & DeBach (1978) for
  biological control activities against coconut scale in other countries.          A subspecies of
  coconut scale, Aspidiotus
  destructor rigidus Reyne, was discovered
  in Indonesia.  Its life cycle is about
  1 1/2 times that of the typical coconut scale, and the female lays only 10-12
  eggs.  It has somewhat different host
  preferences than the typical form, but may cause severe damage to coconut
  (Reyne 1947).  Comperiella unifasciata was introduced but
  never attained high parasitization (Reyne 1948).  In South Bali, Aspidiotiphagus
  citrinus reportedly controlled
  coconut scale completely by 1936 (Voute 1937) (also see Reyne 1948, Simmonds
  1960, Wilson 1960 and Wolcott 1960).       REFERENCES:          [Additional references may be
  found at:   MELVYL
  Library ]   Balachowsky, A.  1948.  Les cochenilles
  de france, d'europe, du nord de l'afrique et du bassin mediterraneen.  IV. 
  Monographie des Coccoidea.  Classification--Diaspidinae (Premiere
  Partie).  Hermann et Cie.,
  Paris.  154 p.   Cochereau, P.  1965.  Contre un
  ravageur du cocotier aux nouvelles-Hebrides. 
  Controle biologique d'Aspidiotus
  destructor Signoret
  (Homoptera-Diaspinae) par Lindorus
  lophantae Blaisd.
  (Coleoptera-Coccinellidae) Ile Vate.  Oleagineaux 20:  507-12.   DeBach, P.  1974.  Biological Control by Natural
  Enemies.  Cambridge University Press,
  London & New York.  323 p.   Ferris, G. F.  1938.  Atlas of the scale insects of North
  America, series II.  Family
  Diaspididae.  Stanford Univ. Press,
  Stanford, California.   Moutia, L. A.  1942.  Division of Entomology.  Mauritius Dept. Agr. Rept. 1941:  14-21.   Moutia, L. A. & R. Mamet. 
  1946.  Review of twenty-five
  years of economic entomology in the Island of Mauritius.  Bull. Ent. Res. 36:  439-72.   Reyne, A.  1947.  Notes on the biology of Comperiella unifasciata Ishii and its host Aspidiotus destructor rigidus
  nov. subspec.  Tijdschr. Ent.
  88 (1945):  294-302.   Reyne, A. 
  1948.  Studies on a serious outbreak of Aspidiotus destructor rigidus
  in the coconut palms of Sangi (North Celebes).  Tijdschr. Ent. 89 (1946):  83-123.   Rosen, D. & P. DeBach.  1978.  Diaspididae.  In:  C. P. Clausen (ed.), Introduced Parasites
  and Predators of Arthropod Pests and Weeds. 
  U. S. Dept. Agric., Agric. Handbk. No. 480.  545 p.   Simmonds, F. J. 
  1960.  Biological control of
  the coconut scale, Aspidiotus
  destructor Sign., in
  Principe, Portuguese West Africa. 
  Bull. Ent. Res. 51:  223-37.   Taylor, T. H. C. 
  1935.  The campaign against Aspidiotus destructor Sign. in Fiji. 
  Bull. Ent. Res. 26:  1-102.   Voute, A. D.  1937.  The biological control of insects in the
  Netherlands East Indies.  Natuurk.
  Tijdschr. V.  Nederland.-Indie
  97:  28-34.   Wilson, F. 
  1960.  A review of the biological control of
  insects and weeds in Australia and Australian New Guinea.  Commonwealth Inst. Biol. Control. Tech.
  Commun. 1: 102 p.   Wolcott, G. N.  1960.  Efficiency of ladybeetles (Coccinellidae:
  Coleoptera) in insect control.  Puerto Rico
  Univ. J. Agric. 44:  166-72.   |