Affiliation:
1. Secretaria da Agricultura, Pecuária e Desenvolvimento Rural, Brazil
2. Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Brazil
3. Bio Tec RS Tecnologia e Consultoria, Brazil
Abstract
ABSTRACT This study aimed to evaluate a strain of Trichogramma pretiosum native to the central region of the state Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, under different temperatures in laboratory and the parasitism of Helicoverpa zea after releases in corn field. Trichogramma pretiosum females were kept at 18, 25 and 30 °C and had their parasitism potential evaluated. Nine plots (400 m2) of maize were installed in randomized blocks under the treatments: 1) staggered release of parasitoids in three different occasions, at three-day intervals; 2) a single release of parasitoids; 3) no release of parasitoids. Ears were collected every four days and the number of caterpillars and eggs of H. zea in the maize silk and the number of damaged ears were estimated. Evaluation started after the tassels growth and ended with the drying of the styles-stigmas. To estimate the grain mass and the ear number and mass, two lines in each plot were delimited and reserved at the end of the cultivation cycle. In laboratory, the highest parasitism rate occurred at 25 °C (35.54%) and the lowest longevity at 30 °C (6.8 days). A total of 1,063 H. zea eggs were collected in the field, 69.52% were parasitized. The mean parasitism rate was higher in T1 (staggered release, 82.77%) than in control (51.87%), but there was no difference in grain yield. Based on the parasitism capacity of the studied strain, it can be potentially used in programs of biological control of H. zea in corn crops of Rio Grande do Sul.