Garlic is widely used as a condiment in Indian cuisine, especially for its medicinal properties.
It is grown in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh,
Utter Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Tamil Nadu (Nilgiris and Kodaikanal
hills).
Among the insect pests, the onion thrips, Thrips tabaci is a major one injuring garlic.
Damage symptoms
Both nymphs and adults cause injury to the plants by sucking the vital leaf sap.
They remain in dense concentrations at leaf bases and whorls and feed by
lacerating the tissues and imbibing the oozing cell sap.
The infestation develops a spotted appearance on the leaves,
subsequently turning into silvery white blotches. The leaf tips fade and
the basal portions get blighted and distorted from tip downwards and
finally the plant dries up. The affected plants yield less, with small
sized bulbs.
Adults are slender, yellowish brown and measure about 1mm in length and have narrow fringed wings.
Eggs are laid singly in tender leaves by making slits with sharp ovipositors by the females.
A single female lays 40-50 eggs which hatch after 4-9 days. The entire
life cycle is completed in 11-21 days. There are more than ten
generations per year. The pest occurs on garlic from November to May and
migrates to other crops from June.
Management
Varieties with open type growth and circular leaf structure are not preferred by thrips.
Tolerant varieties of Garlic viz. G-2, G-19, LCG-1, Ooty-1 may be utilised for cultivation.
Higher doses of nitrogenous fertilizers and close planting should be avoided.
Clean cultivation, regular hoeing and flooding of infested field will check the thrips population.
Insect predators like green lacewing fly and tiny ladybird beetles check the population of this pest.
Application of profenofos or malathion 0.05 per cent, methyl demeton
0.025 per cent , monocrotophos 0.036 per cent, formothion 0.025 per
cent, dimethoate 0.03 per cent, carbaryl 0.1 per cent or phorate 10G at
10kg/hectare could control the pest.
Mr.Jayaraj (Author)
About Author:
J. Jayaraj, associate prof and R.K. Murali Baskaran Professor & Head, Dept of Entomology, Agricultural College and Research Institute, Madurai 625 104, email: vu2jrj@rediffmail.com, phone: 0452- 2422956 Extn: 214
J. Jayaraj, associate prof and R.K. Murali Baskaran Professor & Head, Dept of Entomology, Agricultural College and Research Institute, Madurai 625 104, email: vu2jrj@rediffmail.com, phone: 0452- 2422956 Extn: 214
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