Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Breeders at the Institute of Plant Breeding (IPB) have proven in the fields that it is possible to
produce an eggplant that will omit use of harmful insecticide spray.
Abstinence in spray is particularly effective even while fighting the lepidopteran eggplant pest
fruit and shoot borer (FSB)—a highly destructive pest that can wipe out as much as 100% of a
harvest.
Yet, equally important, Bt eggplant can be grown without any adverse impact on the
environment. Non-spraying will save the environment from persistent pollutants.
Bt eggplant can even enhance biodiversity as beneficial insects—bees, spiders, beetles– will
continue to thrive while growing it.
A first study ever evaluating the impact of Bt eggplant growing on biodiversity has been
released by the University of the Philippines Los Banos (UPLB).
An abundance of these herbivores (plant-eating animal) were found– Bemisia tabaci (silverleaf
whitefly), Amrasca biguttula (Indian cotton jassid), Solenopsis geminata (fire ant), Tettigonidae
(bush crickets or long-horned grasshoppers), and Phycita sp. (Lepidoptera).
Predators found were Araneae (spiders), Coccinellidae (small beetles, ladybird), Campylomma
sp., (silent leaf runner cricket), and Formicidae (ants).
These are the parasitoids and pollinators– Hymenoptera (sawflies,wasps, bees, ants),
Ichneumonid wasp, Xylocopa sp (carpenter bee), and Apis sp. (European honey bee).
“Our data document species abundance, diversity and community dynamics in composition and
structure of canopy-dwelling arthropods and soil micro-fauna in Bt and non-Bt eggplants,”
reported scientists led by Manuel V. Navasero of the National Crop Protection Center-UPLB.
The presence of beneficial insects in Bt eggplant fields has become of interest to scientists,
curious that the technology may have an adverse impact on biodiversity.
Insects traditionally have beneficial biodiversity functions– pollination (in the reproduction or
flowering of plants), decomposition (degrading materials to turn for other functions such
as fertilizers), and biological control (against pests in growing plants).
While allowing beneficial insects to prosper, Bt eggplant may be grown without insecticide spray
against FSB. A related study showed nearly zero damage on non-sprayed Bt eggplants.
“Under such severe pest pressure, the Bt eggplant lines showed less than 1% FSB shoot
damage, less than 2%, fruit damage and fewer FSB larvae at less than 11 larva per plot per
harvest,” according to IPB breeders led by Desiree M. Hautea.
In the past, researchers have studied the impact of Bt technologies (cotton and corn) on non-
target organisms especially non-target arthropods (NTA).
With this finding, it is evident Bt eggplant can be the foundational component for controlling
FSB under an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) system.
“It can dramatically reduce dependence on conventional insecticides,” they said. Other team
members in the study are Randolph N. Candano, Randy A.Hautea of the International Service
for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications. Guest scientists are Frank a. Shotkoski and
Anthony M. Shelton of Cornell University.
The development of Bt eggplant introduces the world to a new age in agriculture, potentially
leading to the end of the use of insecticides.
The sad fact about insecticides is most of these are of broad-spectrum, meaning while they
target only certain insect pests, their spraying spread out to non-target beneficial insects, killing
these and contaminating the environment.
Contamination often leads to “pest resurgence, outbreaks of secondary pests, risk of off-farm
movement of pesticides and environmental contamination.”
There are other controls recommended against FSB. First, the use of resistant plant varieties.
But the development of plant varieties through conventional means has not been successful.
Biological system is also a control—the use of sex pheromones for trapping adults and
disrupting mating of the lepidopteran pest.
Thus, they have resorted to heavy insecticide spraying. Some farmers spray their eggplant 72
times during a 180-day eggplant season.
The success of the development of Bt technology in eliminating crop pests have so far led to
planting of Bt crops (corn, cotton) on 83.7 million hectares globally as of 2015.
“Consumers would have an adequate supply of safer eggplant at a lower price. Bt eggplant
presents a more efficacious, environmentally benign and profitable alternative to the current
practice of intense use of chemical insecticides.”
The eggplant trials were conducted through three cropping seasons from March 2010 to
October 2012 in normally pest-infested eggplant fields in Barangays Paitan and Sta. Maria in
Pangasinan.
This is the site for Philippines’ largest eggplant producer accounting for around 30% of annual
output of 200,000 metric tons yearly.
Both the Bt eggplant and non-Bt eggplant plants were grown 100% organic—no insecticide
sprays against FSB.
However, in order to manage plant health, they did use other sprays under very judicious
circumstances — highly selective insecticides *thiamethoxam for leafhopper and whitefly and
sulphur for mites).
“No significant differences in the seasonal mean abundance were detected in 81.3% (84/91) of
the total NTAs observed between Bt and non-Bt eggplants.”
While there were significant differences observed in some Hemipterans (true bugs—cicadas,
aphids, planthoppers, leafhoppers, shield bugs), the differences were observed only in one or
two weeks out of the 5 to 17-week sampling periods each season.
Among Hemipterans found are jumping plant bug (Halticus minutus), leafhoppers (Amrasca
biguttula), mirid bugs (Campylomma sp., Cyrtopeltis sp.), whitefly (Bemisia tabaci)), non-target
lepidopterans (leaf folder (Homona coffearia), lepidopteran leafminer (Phycita sp.), semilooper
(Chrysodeixis eriosoma), tomato fruitworm (Helicoverpa armigera), and coccinelids
(Coccinelidae).
“Among the herbivores whiteflies and leafhoppers were the most abundant in all three trials and
spiders and coccinelids were the most abundant among the predators. Among the parasitoids
and pollinators, an ichneumonid wasp (Ichneumonidae) and honeybee (Apis sp.) were common
in trials 1 and 2, while a cutworm parasitoid (Snellenius manilae) and honeybee (Apis sp.) were
common in trials 2 and 3”
For the non target arthropods were lepidopteran leafminer (Phycita sp), leafhopper (A.
biguttula), whitefly (B. tabaci), red fire ant (S. geminata), Phaneroptera sp., tomato fruit worm
(H. armigera), mayfly (Ephemenoptera), semilooper (C. eriosoma), field cockroach
(Blatellidae),coccinelids (Coccinelidae),Campylomma sp., latridiid (Latridiidae),
cutworm(Spodopteralitura), spotted lady beetle (Epilachna spp.), winged ant (Formicidae) and
spider (Araneae),dolichopodid fly(Dolichopodidae), and Monolepta sp. (Growth Publishing for
Biotechnology Information Center).