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Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene

Horticulturalists and gardeners in temperate regions often claim that planting marigolds next to tomato plants protects the tomatoes from the glasshouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum Westwood). If shown to hold true, this technique could be used in larger-scale tomato production, protecting th...

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Autores principales: Conboy, Niall J. A., McDaniel, Thomas, Ormerod, Adam, George, David, Gatehouse, Angharad M. R., Wharton, Ellie, Donohoe, Paul, Curtis, Rhiannon, Tosh, Colin R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6396911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30822326
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213071
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author Conboy, Niall J. A.
McDaniel, Thomas
Ormerod, Adam
George, David
Gatehouse, Angharad M. R.
Wharton, Ellie
Donohoe, Paul
Curtis, Rhiannon
Tosh, Colin R.
author_facet Conboy, Niall J. A.
McDaniel, Thomas
Ormerod, Adam
George, David
Gatehouse, Angharad M. R.
Wharton, Ellie
Donohoe, Paul
Curtis, Rhiannon
Tosh, Colin R.
author_sort Conboy, Niall J. A.
collection PubMed
description Horticulturalists and gardeners in temperate regions often claim that planting marigolds next to tomato plants protects the tomatoes from the glasshouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum Westwood). If shown to hold true, this technique could be used in larger-scale tomato production, protecting the crop and helping to introduce greater plant diversity into these agro-ecosystems. Here we present two large-scale glasshouse trials corresponding to the two main ways growers are likely to use marigolds to control whiteflies. In the first, marigolds are grown next to tomato throughout the growing period and we quantify whitefly population growth from the seedling stage over a 48 day infestation period. Here we show that association with marigolds significantly slows whitefly population development. Introducing additional whitefly-attractive ‘pull’ plants around the perimeter of plots has little effect, but reducing the proportion of marigolds and introducing other non-hosts of whiteflies (basil, nasturtium and Chinese cabbage) also reduces whitefly populations on tomato. The second experiment assesses the efficacy of marigolds when used as an ‘emergency’ measure. Here we allow whitefly populations to build to a high density on unprotected tomatoes then introduce marigolds and assess whitefly population over a further period. Following laboratory work showing limonene to be a major chemical component of French marigolds and a negative behaviour response of whiteflies to this compound, limonene dispensers are added as an additional treatment to this experiment. “Emergency” marigold companion planting yielded minimal reductions in whitefly performance, but the use of limonene dispensers was more effective. Our work indicates that companion planting short vine tomatoes with French marigolds throughout the growing season will slow development of whitefly populations. Introducing marigolds to unprotected tomatoes after significant whitefly build-up will be less effective. The use of limonene dispensers placed near to tomato plants also shows promise. It is argued that this work supports the possibility of the development of a mixture of tomato companion plants that infer ‘associational resistance’ against many major invertebrate pests of tomato. Such a mixture, if comprising edible or ornamental plants, would be economically viable, would reduce the need for additional chemical and biological control, and, if used outdoors, would generate plant-diverse agro-ecosystems that are better able to harbour invertebrate wildlife.
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spelling pubmed-63969112019-03-08 Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene Conboy, Niall J. A. McDaniel, Thomas Ormerod, Adam George, David Gatehouse, Angharad M. R. Wharton, Ellie Donohoe, Paul Curtis, Rhiannon Tosh, Colin R. PLoS One Research Article Horticulturalists and gardeners in temperate regions often claim that planting marigolds next to tomato plants protects the tomatoes from the glasshouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum Westwood). If shown to hold true, this technique could be used in larger-scale tomato production, protecting the crop and helping to introduce greater plant diversity into these agro-ecosystems. Here we present two large-scale glasshouse trials corresponding to the two main ways growers are likely to use marigolds to control whiteflies. In the first, marigolds are grown next to tomato throughout the growing period and we quantify whitefly population growth from the seedling stage over a 48 day infestation period. Here we show that association with marigolds significantly slows whitefly population development. Introducing additional whitefly-attractive ‘pull’ plants around the perimeter of plots has little effect, but reducing the proportion of marigolds and introducing other non-hosts of whiteflies (basil, nasturtium and Chinese cabbage) also reduces whitefly populations on tomato. The second experiment assesses the efficacy of marigolds when used as an ‘emergency’ measure. Here we allow whitefly populations to build to a high density on unprotected tomatoes then introduce marigolds and assess whitefly population over a further period. Following laboratory work showing limonene to be a major chemical component of French marigolds and a negative behaviour response of whiteflies to this compound, limonene dispensers are added as an additional treatment to this experiment. “Emergency” marigold companion planting yielded minimal reductions in whitefly performance, but the use of limonene dispensers was more effective. Our work indicates that companion planting short vine tomatoes with French marigolds throughout the growing season will slow development of whitefly populations. Introducing marigolds to unprotected tomatoes after significant whitefly build-up will be less effective. The use of limonene dispensers placed near to tomato plants also shows promise. It is argued that this work supports the possibility of the development of a mixture of tomato companion plants that infer ‘associational resistance’ against many major invertebrate pests of tomato. Such a mixture, if comprising edible or ornamental plants, would be economically viable, would reduce the need for additional chemical and biological control, and, if used outdoors, would generate plant-diverse agro-ecosystems that are better able to harbour invertebrate wildlife. Public Library of Science 2019-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6396911/ /pubmed/30822326 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213071 Text en © 2019 Conboy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Conboy, Niall J. A.
McDaniel, Thomas
Ormerod, Adam
George, David
Gatehouse, Angharad M. R.
Wharton, Ellie
Donohoe, Paul
Curtis, Rhiannon
Tosh, Colin R.
Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
title Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
title_full Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
title_fullStr Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
title_full_unstemmed Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
title_short Companion planting with French marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
title_sort companion planting with french marigolds protects tomato plants from glasshouse whiteflies through the emission of airborne limonene
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6396911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30822326
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213071
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