1. A REVIEW ON BIOLOGY AND
MANAGEMENT OF MAIZE STEM BORER,
Chilo partellus (Swinhoe, 1885)
PRESENTER:
Madan Subedi
Msc.Ag. Entomology
Roll no. R-2018-ENT-01M
Agriculture and Forestry University
2. INTRODUCTION
• One of the most severe insect pests of maize in Nepal (Neupane, 1986)
• Damage results dead heart which in extreme case renders the plant
earless (Neupane, Bhandari, Sharma, Yadav, & Subedi, 2016)
• Cause loss range from 20-80% in maize (Thakur, Shrestha, Bhandari, &
Achhami, 2013)
• A total of 28% more harvest from uninfested fields as compared to
the fields infested with maize stem borer (Sharma & Gautam, 2010)
4. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
Native to Asia (Kalaisekar, Padmaja, Bhagwat, & Patil, 2017)
First recorded in Africa from Malawi in 1932 (Tams, 1932)
Currently, widespread in Asia and Africa (Bleszynski, 1970; Jepson, 1954;
Panwar, 2005; Sallam & Allsopp, 2008; Sharma, Kumar, & Sharma, 2006)
Dominant and economically most important stem borer species at
elevations below 1800 m in Africa (Seshu, 1983)
Evidences of displacement of Chilo orichalcociliellus (Strand) by Chilo
partellus in Africa (Ofomata, Overholt, Lux, Huis, & Egwuatu, 2000)
5. IDENTIFICATION
Eggs
Shape: flat and oval (scale-like)
Colour: creamy-white
Size: about 0.8mm long
Form of appearance: Overlapping batches of 10-80 eggs
Fig. Egg batch of Chilo partellus
6. ……IDENTIFICATION
Larva
Have only 4 pinkish stripes, the median stripe being absent, the lateral
stripes passing above the abdominal spiracles
Fig. Chilo partellus larva
7. ……IDENTIFICATION
….Larva
Arrangement of seta and tubercles
Fig. Setal arrangement in thorax Fig. Setal arrangement in abdominal Fig. Setal arrangement in
(meso and metathorax) segment (1-7) eight abdominal segment
14. LIFE CYCLE
Eggs laid in batches on both host and non-host plants (10-80 per batch)
Freshly hatched larva search for host plants
Leaves enclosed in whorl – preferred by larva
Larva use mechanism of ballooning/walking for movement (Berger,
1992)
Larva undergoes 6 instars molting 5 times (Patel, Devananda, & Korak,
2018)
Pupation- Inside larval tunnel or outside plant (exit holes are evident)
(Achhami, BK, & Bhandari, 2015)
Most favourable temperature for development: 30 0C
5 generations per year in Chitwan conditions (Neupane, Chapman, &
Coppel, 1986)
16. NATURE OF DAMAGE
Leaves enclosed in whorls- damaged by scrapping by early instar
larva
Symptoms evident as symmetrical holes when leaves come out of
whorl (Reddy, 1998)
Two types of holes:
Pin holes (small, pin head size)
Window panes (large than pin head, leaves tend to tear apart)
Dead heart- Central leaves damaged and growing points killed
Late instar larvae- Move to collar region, develop feeding tunnels
Entry of larva in cobs damage grains
17. ….NATURE OF DAMAGE
Overall effect on plant- Poor growth and reduced yield
Infested plants- Highly susceptible to wind damage and secondary
infections (Berger, 1989)
Damage to crop stages (Fletcher & Ghosh, 1920)
100% damage may take place at early stage
Matured plants show some degree of tolerance
18. ….NATURE OF DAMAGE
Fig. Larval tunnel
Fig. Larval tunnel
Fig. Dead heart Fig. Pin holes Fig. Window panes
20. DIAPAUSE
Facultative diapause is reported in C. partellus
Summer diapause (Scheltes, 1978)
Winter diapause (Dhillon & Hasan, 2017)
21. ….DIAPAUSE
(Source: Dhillon & Hasan, 2017)
Characteristics Non-diapause Diapause (Aestivation/Hibernation)
Size of larvae Large Reduced
Body colour and pigmentation Light brown with dark brown
pigmentation
Creamy to milky white with reduced or
no pigmentation
Asetose tubercles (AT) Present Absent
Head capsule colour Dark brown to black with clear
epicranial suture
Reddish brown sometime with distinct
epicranial suture
Color of prothorasic shield Dark brown Light brown to creamy
Symptoms to enter diapause (diapause
chamber)
No diapause chamber Fail to pupate and construct diapause
chamber
Supernumerary moults No supernumerary moults >2 supernumerary moults
Pupal size Larger Smaller
Adult colour and size Light brown and larger in size Dark brown and smaller in size
22. ECONOMIC INJURY LEVEL (EIL)
EIL - insect pest abundance or amount of damage that results in
economic yield loss (Pedigo, 1991)
Most vulnerable period for borer attack: 10-17 days (Sarup et al.,
1977)
EIL for kharif and rabi maize - 2.42 and 2.09 larvae per plant
(Chouraddi & Mallapur, 2017)
EIL for 20- and 40-day old plants- 3.2 and 3.9 larvae/plant (Reddy &
Sum, 1991)
EIL for insecticidal application - 20% and 2% of plants with visible
symptoms of whorl damage, for the resistant and susceptible
genotypes (Berg, Rensburg, & Westhuizen, 1997)
24. Cultural control
Good crop hygiene
Destruction of crop residues (stems and stubbles)
Removal of volunteer crop plants and/or alternative hosts of
diapausing larvae and active populations (Verma & Singh, 1989)
Intercropping of maize with cowpea in the ratio 1:1 (Singh, Jaglan, &
Verma, 2018)
25. Biological control
Biological control agents - Cheap and effective ( Kfir, 1992)
Spinosad 45% EC prepared from bacteria Saccharopolyspora spinosa
(Neupane et al.,2016; Devanapalli & Kumar, 2018)
Beauvaria bassiana- an effective fungus (Maniania, 1993)
Formulations of the protozoan Nosema marucae and Nosema partelli
(Odindo & Opondo, 2009; Walter & Kfir, 1993)
Commercial preparations of bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis
(Brownbridge, 2001)
26. ….Biological control
Table 2. Common parasitoids used for management of MSB (Kfir, 1997)
Parasitoid Order Family
Allorhogas pyralophagus Hymenoptera Braconidae
Cotesia chilonis Hymenoptera Braconidae
Cotesia flavipes Hymenoptera Braconidae
Descampsina sesamlae Diptera Tachinidae
Mallochia pyralidi Hymenoptera Ichneumonidae
Meloboris sinicus Hymenoptera Ichneumonidae
Metagonistylum minense Diptera Tachinidae
Paratheresia claripalpis Diptera Tachinidae
Sturmiopsis inferens Diptera Tachinidae
Tetrastichus howardi Hymenoptera Eulophidae
Trichogramma chilonis Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae
Trichogramma ostrinia Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae
Xanthopimpia stemmator Hymenoptera Ichneumonidae
27. Pheromonal control
Mating disruption preferred to mass trapping (Campion & Nesbitt,
1983)
Major chemical components of pheromone (Hansson, Blackwell,
Hallberg, & Lofqvist, 1995)
• Z)-11-hexadecenal
• (Z)-11-hexadecenol
• (Z)-10-pentadecenal
28. Botanical control
Methanolic extracts of Bougainvillea spectabilis flowers and distilled
water leaf extracts of Nerium oleander (Anuj & Sharma, 1999)
Chloroform and methanol leaf extracts of Cymbopogon martinii and
Eucalyptus globulus kill larvae up to 5 days after treatment (Bhatnagar
& Sharma, 1999)
Extracts from Azadirachta indica and Annona squamosa kernels
(Sharma, Sankaram, & Nwanze,1999)
29. Chemical control
Timing of application of chemical insecticides is crucial (Nwanze &
Mueller, 1967)
Effective in early growth stage of the crop (i.e. up to 10 ± 12 days)
Best when applied at egg hatching and the first three instars, before
the larvae enter the stem
Organochlorines, organophosphates, carbamates and synthetic
pyrethroids - widely used against the pest (Dharmasena, 1993; Teli,
Chavan, Ankalkoppe, Khot, & Harers, 2007)
Chloropyrifos 10% EC @ 1.5 ml L-1 of water, chloropyriphos 50%
EC+cypermethrin 5% EC @ 1.5 ml L-1 of water, imidachloprid 17.8%
@ 0.5 ml L-1 of water commonly used in Nepal (Neupane et al., 2016)