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Avocado Thrips Scirtothrips perseae Nakahara -- Thysanoptera:
Thripidae |
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Avocado
thrips were first detected in California in June of 1996 when they were
damaging foliage in a Ventura County orchard. Since then the thrips population has increased rapidly causing
significant damage to foliage and fruit in Ventura. In little under a year, the thrips spread southward and was
found in San Diego County in May of 1997.
By July of 1997, significant damage attributable to avocado thrips was
noticed in several orchards in San Diego County. Foreign exploration for the avocado thrips and its natural
enemies indicates that this pest is commonly found on avocados grown between
Mexico City and Guatemala City.
Genetic analyses suggest that the source of California's thrip
population was Coatepec-Harinas in Mexico.
Avocado thrips have not been recorded in any other host plant in
California, indicating it may have a limited host plant range and close
evolutionary history with avocados.
Avocados evolved in the southern Mexico to northern Guatemala area. The insect infests about eighty percent of
the commercial avocado acreage in California. However, by 2022 this pest has been unable to establish in
inland valley areas not within the influence of marine breezes that moderate
summer temperatures. Studies have
shown that this pest is intolerant of above 30°C [86°F]) and population
growth is greatest when temperatures are lower (20°C [67°F]). Thrips
populations build to very high levels (i.e.,
100-400 larvae per leaf) over winter and spring causing damage to leaves and
scarring of young fruit. Some
orchards sustained 80-100% fruit scarring with some fruits turning brown and
mummified. The quantity of
first-grade fruit produced was reduced, on average, by about 27 percent in
orchards with avocado thrips. REFERENCES
FURTHER RELATED REFERENCES Bellows Jr.,T. S. & E. F. Legner. 1993.
Foreign exploration. In: R. G. Van Driesche & T. S. Bellows Jr.
(Eds.), Steps in Classical Arthropod
Biological Control.
Proceedings of Thomas Say Publications n Entomology. Entomological Society of America, Lanham,
Maryland, pp. 2542. Firko, M. J. 1995. Importation of avocado fruit (Persea americana) from Mexico:
Supplemental Risk Assessment.
Available from: http://www.aphis.usda.gov/ppq/avocados/PRAmemo.pdf. Fleschner, C. A. 1954. Biological control of avocado pests. California Avocado Society Yearbook
38: 125129. Fleschner, C. A., J. C. Hall & D. W. Ricker. 1955.
Natural balance of mite pests in an avocado grove. California Avocado Society Yearbook
39: 155162 . Funderburk, J.,
J. Stravinsky & S. Olsen.
2000. Predation of Frankliniella occidentalis
(Thysanoptera: Thripidae) in field peppers by Orius insidiosus (Hemiptera: Anthocoridae). Environmental Entomology
29: 376382 . Hernandez, H. G., R. M. Johansen, L. G. Corona, A. S.
Castro, E. E. Venegas, F. D. de Anda & A. R. Valle de la
Paz. 2000. Plagas de aguacate. In:
Teliz, D. (Ed.), El Aguacate y su Manejo Integrado. Ediciones Mundi-Prensa, Mexico D. F., pp. 117136. Hoddle, M. S. &
J. G. Morse. 1997. Avocado thrips: a serious new pest of
avocados in California. California
Avocado Society Yearbook 81: 8190. Hoddle, M. S.
& J. G. Morse. 1998.
Avocado thrips update.
Citrograph 83: 37. Hoddle, M. S.,
J. G. Morse, P. Phillips
& B. Faber. 1998.
Progress on management of avocado thrips. California Avocado Society Yearbook 82: 87100. Hoddle, M. S.,
J. G. Morse, P. Phillips &
B. Faber. 1999. Avocado thrips update. Citrograph 84: 1314. Jetter, K.
1999. Case Studies: citrus
canker; avocado thrips and mites. In:
Coppock, R. H. & Kreith, M. (Eds.),
Exotic Pests and Diseases:Biology, economics, Public Policy. University of California Agricultural
Issues Center, Davis, pp. 124129. Johansen, R. M. & A. Mojica-Guzman.
1998. The genus Scirtothrips Shull 1909 (Thysanoptera:
Thripidae, Sericothripini). In: Folia Entomologica (Mexico) 104: 23108. Johansen, R. M., A. Mojica-Guzman & G.
Ascencion-Betanzos. 1999. Introduccion a conocimiento de los
insectos nocivos Mexicanos, en el agucatero (Persea
americana Miller). Revista
Chapingo Serie Horticultura 5: 279295 . Kopp, L. E. 1966. A taxonomic revision of the genus Persea in the western hemisphere
(PerseaeLauraceae).
Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden 14: 1120. Lewis, T.
1973. Thrips, Their Biology,
Ecology, and Economic Importance.
Academic Press, London. Loomans, A. J. M., M. Tamotsu & I. D.
Greene. 1997. Interactions with hymenopterous
parasitoids and parasitic nematodes. In: Lewis, T. (Ed.), Thrips as
Crop Pests. CAB International,
Wallingford, pp. 355397. McMurtry, J. A.
1992. The role of exotic
natural enemies in the biological control of insect and mite pests of avocado
in California. In: Proceedings of the 2nd World Avocado
Congress pp. 247252. McMurtry ,J. A.,
H. G. Johnson & S. J. Newberger. 1991. Imported parasite
of greenhouse thrips established on California avocado. California Agriculture 45: 3132. Memmott, J.,
S. V. Fowler & R. L. Hill. 1998. The effect of
release size on the probability of establishment of biological control
agents: gorse thrips (Sericothrips
staphylinus) released against
gorse (Ulex europaeus) in New
Zealand. Biocontrol Science and
Technology 8: 103115. Mhameed, S., D. Sharon, D. Kaufman, E. Lahav, J.
Hillel, C. Degani & U. Lavi. 1997.
Genetic relationships within avocado (Persea
americana Mill) cultivars and between Persea species.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics 94:
279286. Morse, J. G.,
R. L. Metcalf, M. L.
Arpaia & R. E. Rice. 1995. Risks of exotic
pest introductions from importation of fresh Mexican Hass avocados into the
United States: an analysis by the University of California Center for Exotic
Pest Research of USDA-APHIS Proposed Rule 7 CFR part 319, Docket No.
94-116-3. College of Natural and
Agricultural Sciences, University of California, Riverside. Mound, L. A.
& R. Marullo. 1996.
The Thrips of Central and South America: An Introduction (Insecta:
Thysanoptera). Associated Publishers,
Gainesville, Florida. Mound, L. A. &
R. Zur Strassen. 2001. The genus Scirtothrips
(Thysanoptera: Thripidae) in Mexico: a critique of the review by Johansen
& Mojica-Guzman (1998). Folia Entomologica
(Mexico) 40: 133142. Nakahara, S.
1995. Taxonomic studies of the
genus Tetraleurodes (Homoptera:
Aleyrodidae). Insecta Mundi 9: 105150 . Nakahara, S. 1997. Scirtothrips perseae (Thysanoptera: Thripidae), a new species infesting
avocado in southern California. Insecta Mundi
11: 189192 . Phillips, P. A. 1997. Managing greenhouse thrips in coastal avocados. Subtropical Fruit News 5: 13. Popenoe, F. O.
1915. Varieties of the
avocado. Report of the First
Semi-Annual Meeting of the California Avocado Commission, vol. 1: 4469. Rose, Mike & Paul DeBach. 1990.
Foreign exploration and importation of natural enemies. In: Rosen, D. (Ed.), The Armored
Scale Insects, Their Biology, Natural Enemies and Control, vol. B. Elsvier, Amsterdam, pp. 417431. Rose, Mike
& J. B. Woolley.
1984. Previously imported
parasite may control invading whitefly.
California Avocado Society Yearbook 68: 127131. Rosen, David & Paul DeBach. 1992.
Foreign exploration: the key to classical biological control. Florida Entomologist
75: 409413. Sakimura, K. & K. ONeil. 1979. Frankliniella, redefinition of genus and
revision of minuta group
species (Thysanoptera: Thripidae).
United States Dept. of Agriculture
Technical Bulletin 1572: 148. Scora, R. W. & B. Bergh. 1990.
The origins and taxonomy of avocado (Persea
americana) Mill. Lauraceae. Acta Horticulturae 275:
387 394. Storey, W. B., B. Bergh, B & G. A. Zentmyer. 1986.
The origin, indigenous range, and dissemination of the avocado. California Avocado Society Yearbook 70: 127133. Triapitzin, S. V. & D. H. Headrick. 1995. A review of the
Nearctic species of the thrips-attacking genus Ceranisus Walker (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae). Transactions of the American Entomological
Society 121 (4): 227-248. Triapitzin, S. V. & J. G. Morse. 1999. Survey of parasitoids of citrus thrips, Scirtothrips citri (Moulton), in
southern California. Russian
Entomological Journal 8 (1). |