Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T04:29:15.822Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The control of the coconut pest Melittomma insulare (Coleoptera, Lymexylidae) in Seychelles.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

I. W. B. Nye
Affiliation:
Commonwealth Institute of Entomology.

Extract

The larvae of the Lymexylid beetle, Melittomma insulare Fairm., bore into the bases of coconut palms. Associated with them are micro-organisms which cause extensive rotting of the bole, particularly at ground-level, and this results in the palm falling.

During 1953–58, an attempt was made in Praslin Island, Seychelles, to obtain maximum control of this pest using paradichlorobenzene as a fumigant. At the time of this treatment, 77 per cent, of the 90,500 coconut palms in the island were infested. Of these, about five per cent, were felled as worthless mountainside palms and nine per cent, fell during or within a week of treatment.

In 1960 it was found that a further 15 per cent, of the palms had fallen and of those still standing 53 per cent, remained infested. The continuing high loss of palms after treatment was due to the closed, moist fumigation chambers within the trunks encouraging the spread of rot, coupled with an incomplete kill of larvae.

A new method of treatment is described in which the necrotic wood is excised and a formulation of coal tar creosote and coal tar liberally applied. Praslin Island was retreated, using this tar method, and a plan to treat all the coconut palms in Mahé, the main island of the group, was subsequently commenced. Losses of palms during and within a week of treatment have been reduced to less than one per cent., and results are quoted which show that a single treatment can reduce a serious infestation in which 80 per cent, of palms are more or less heavily attacked to one in which only 18 per cent, of the palms are attacked and, on average, contain only five larvae. The treatment ensures that the entrances to the tunnels of these are exposed to view, and accordingly the surviving larvae can easily be killed.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1961

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Brown, E. S. (1954). The biology of the coconut pest Melittomma insulare (Col., Lymexylonidae), and its control in the Seychelles.—Bull. ent. Res. 45 pp. 166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lionnet, J. F. G. (1959). A review of the biological control of agricultural pests in the Seychelles.—E. Afr. agric. J. 24 pp. 254256.Google Scholar
Nye, I. W. B. (1959). Report on the control of Melittomma insulare Fairm. (Coleoptera, Lymexylonidae) attacking coconut palms in Seychelles.—64 pp., multigraph. Seychelles Govt.Google Scholar
Nye, I. W. B. (1961). Second report on the control of Melittomma insulare (Coleoptera, Lymexylidae) and other pests attacking coconut palms in Seychelles.—[14] pp., multigraph. [London, Colon. Off.]Google Scholar
Simmonds, F. J. (1956). An investigation of the possibilities of biological control of Melittomma insulare Fairm. (Coleoptera, Lymexylonidae), a serious pest of coconut in the Seychelles.—Bull. ent. Res. 47 pp. 685702.Google Scholar
Vesey-FitzGerald, D. (1941). Melittomma insulare, Fairm. (Col. Lymexylonidae), a serious pest of coconut in the Seychelles.—Bull. ent. Res. 31 pp. 383402.Google Scholar