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From 2010 to 2012 harvest seasons, studies of the armyworm Pseudaletia unipuncta were conducted in sugarcane in Tucuma ´n. The larvae are nocturnal and during the day remain hidden under the crop residues or in the soil. Damage begins in spring when temperature rises. They produce damage by feeding and killing the shoots, delaying the growth of the new shoots in the cane field. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of agricultural residues of sugarcane green harvest on larval abundance and the losses caused by this armyworm. Trials were conducted at three locations. Twelve points of 2 m row length were evaluated every 15 days from September to November. The number of larvae and percentage of affected shoots were evaluated. When the attack of P. unipuncta began in September, a plot of 1 ha was sprayed with pesticides, and another plot was left with harvest residues and the pest. Five samples of 10 stalks were extracted per plot. Factory parameters (pol, brix) were evaluated in the lab. Localities averaged shoot losses between 13 and 30 %. The average relative abundance of larvae in the plots with harvest residues was 0.5 larvae per 2 m row; no larvae were found in plots without residues. Factory sugar yield was 10.7 % in the plot without insecticidal control and 12 % in the treated plot, with a total sugar loss of 23.2 % per ha. To prevent losses caused by this species, it is important to sample early green cane harvested fields in spring.
The sugarcane stem weevil, Acrotomopus atropunctellus (Boheman) (Curculionidae: Molytinae: Cholini) is an important economic pest from the Northwestern region of Argentina. Analyses of the headspace volatiles produced by separated males and females revealed one male-specific compound. Its structural identification is reported here in using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectroscopy analysis and chemical micro-reactions. Besides, two laboratory olfactometry assays allowed us to propose 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (sulcatone) as an aggregation pheromone for this insect, being attractive to both conspecific males and females. This compound is reported for the first time as involved in the Curculionidae family communication.
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