Biology and management of the banana weevil (Cosmopolites sordidus germar) in the socioeconomic and agroecological context of the indigenous territories of Talamanca, Costa Rica
Por: Dahlquist, Ruth
| CATIE - Centro Agronómico Tropical de Investigación y Enseñanza Turrialba, Costa Rica
| University of Idaho, Moscow, ID (EUA)
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Editor: Idaho, Estados Unidos de América CATIE 2008Descripción: 154 páginas : 20 ilustraciones, 14 tablas.Tema(s): MUSA| Tipo de ítem | Ubicación actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tesis
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Biblioteca Conmemorativa Orton | Colección de Tesis | Thesis D131 (Navegar estantería) | Disponible | 109869 c.2 | |
Tesis
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Biblioteca Conmemorativa Orton | Colección de Tesis | Thesis D131 (Navegar estantería) | Disponible | 109868 |
Tesis (Ph. D.). -- CATIE, Turrialba (Costa Rica) -- University of Idaho, Idaho (Estados Unidos de América), 2008
Incluye referencias bibliográficas en cada capítulo
The banana weevil is a pest on bananas and plantains throughout the tropics. No published studies exist on the banana weevil in smallholder banana and plantain systems within the Bribri-Cabécar Indigenous Territories in Talamanca, Costa Rica. Alternatives to pesticides in plantain and improved pest management in organic banana to increase profitability of agroforestry systems are needed. We conducted a livelihoods analysis of cacao agroforestry systems comparing cacao to plantain and organic banana. Existing production data was integrated with data from household interviews to identify factors in the decline of cacao agroforestry systems. We also conducted a rapid rural appraisal with plantain and organic banana producers. Weevil damage decreased by 33% in farms with traps, and did not decrease in control farms. There was no reduction in trap catches, indicating that damage reduction can occur without reduction of weevil populations. We evaluated movement patterns of banana weevils in response to host plant volatiles at 1 and 2 m distances in the field. Weevils were tagged, released, and relocated using harmonic radar. Weevils oriented to host plant volatiles at 1 m but not 2 m, and displayed positive orthokinesis at both distances.


Tesis
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