Title: Thrips Management in Blueberries
1Thrips Management in Blueberries Oscar E.
Liburd Entomology and Nematology Department
University of Florida
2Background
Flower thrips, Frankliniella spp.
- Adults 1/16 of an inch
- Yellow-orange coloration
- Wide host range, rapid
- colonizers
- Multiple generations per year
- Travel along wind currents
3Background - Thrips Lifecycle
Pupa non-feeding
Larval feeding
Male
Female
4Flower-thrips species
97
1
Western
Florida flower thrips
1
1
Eastern
Other
5Goals (2005)
- Track the movement of flower thrips into
blueberry fields - To correlate thrips population with blueberry
flower - development
- 3) To evaluate reduced-risk and conventional
- insecticides for control of thrips in
blueberries
6Tracking the movement of flower thrips into
blueberry fields
- 2 Farms were selected
- Each farm had 49 sampling stations (white sticky
traps) - Traps were collected every other day for 25 days
- Correlated the number of thrips caught on traps
with flower development
7Relationship between flower development and
movement of thrips
40 - 50
0 - 5
Day 7 Max 25 thrips/trap
Day 3 Max 5 thrips/trap
8Movement of thrips into blueberry fields
80 90
70 - 80
Day 16
190 thrips/trap
Fruit formation
Day 21
Day 13
35 thrips/trap
100 thrips/trap
9Results
Size of thrips populations in relation to flower
phenology
Percentages of opened flowers
10
70
20
90
1
R 0.9908 F 107.8 df 3,9 P lt 0.0001
10Questions
Q. When do I spray for thrips? Ans. It depends
on several factors including history of farm If
you have a history of high thrips population you
should begin to spray when 5 of the flowers have
opened If your farm usually experience low
thrips population, you can wait until 50 of the
flowers have opened to begin your spraying
program Q. What should I spray?
11Pesticide efficacy results
2004
2005
12Effect of SpinTor on thrips population over 48
hours
13Question
- What is the relationship between thrips numbers
- and injury?
14Thrips Injury
Hand pollination
Thrips release
Flower protection
Fruit formation counting
Flower protection
15Thrips Injury fruits
0 thrips /flower
16Thrips Injury fruits
Oviposition Injury (5 to 10 thrips / flower)
17Thrips Injury Fruit dehydration
20 thrips /flower
18Thrips Injury
Average S.E.M.
19Thrips Injury oviposition
Style
Petals
- 2 blueberry
species in FL - 250 flower per species
- 27C and 80 RH
- 15 days
Fruits
Ovaries
20Thrips Injury oviposition
a
b
c
c
F 19.16 df 3,46 P lt 0.001
21Conclusions
- Flower-thrips reduce the quality and quantity of
the blueberries - 7 days after bloom the initiation of hot-spots
are defined - Thrips are present in blueberry fields for about
25 days from flower opening to petal fall - In cases where there are high populations of
thrips, insecticides could be more effective if
applied when the hot-spots are defined (5-10 days
after bloom) - Assail, Diamond and Actara have shown to be
significantly more effective than Malathion in - controlling thrips population in blueberry
fields
22Acknowledgements
- Florida Blueberry Growers Association (FBGA)
- Michigan Blueberry Growers Association (MBG)
- Florida and Georgia blueberry growers
- Southern Region EPA grant X8-96424405-0
- Small Fruit and Vegetable Lab at UF