Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Oct 2009

A Small-Bolt Method for Screening Tree Protectants Against Bark Beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)

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Page Range: 297 – 307
DOI: 10.18474/0749-8004-44.4.297
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A simple, small-bolt method was developed and refined for evaluating and screening treatments being considered as prophylactics against bark beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Scolytinae). Using this method, 4 insecticide products (3 active ingredients) were evaluated against the southern pine beetle, Dendroctonus frontalis Zimmermann, intermittently during a period spanning 1 day to 9 months postapplication. Permethrin (Astro®) showed the best residual effectiveness as determined by the small-bolt assay, followed by bifenthrin (Onyx®) and carbaryl (Ferti-Lome® and Sevin XLR Plus®). Bifenthrin has been reported as effective in field tests with D. frontalis and carbaryl as ineffective, lending credence to the small-bolt method. Results with permethrin suggest that a more extensive evaluation may be warranted for this active ingredient. The method as developed provides a useful and efficient tool for Identifying preventive treat-ments that are unlikely to be effective against D. frontalis. Its use for screening ineffective products would limit expensive and time-consuming field evaluations to treatments that show significant promise. With additional refinement, the small-bolt assay may provide most of the benefits of more costly testing methods while offering sufficient flexibility for comparing prophylactic treatments that rely on different modes of action.

Copyright: © 2009 Georgia Entomological Society, Inc.

Contributor Notes

2Address inquiries (email: brianstrom@fs.fed.us).
Received: 21 Nov 2008
Accepted: 21 Jan 2009
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