Spittlebug damage on tropical grass and its impact in pasture-based beef production systems
journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-30, 00:00 authored by GFS Congio, PC de Almeida, TR Barreto, VA Tinazo, TACC da Silva, Diogo Fleury Azevedo CostaDiogo Fleury Azevedo Costa, M CorsiSpittlebugs are the main pest of tropical pastures and Marandu palisade grass (Urochloa brizantha cv. Marandu) is the most representative cultivated pasture in the tropics. Our objective was to characterize Marandu palisade grass responses subjected to Mahanarva (Hemiptera: Cercopidae) attack and to estimate the losses in terms of beef production from pasture-based systems. A set of five experiments were carried out. Three consecutive years of monitoring showed that Mahanarva spittlebugs increased their abundance after first rains with three to four peaks throughout the wet season. A decrease of 66% on herbage yield was observed in the greenhouse trial, with an average decrease of 61% on pools of calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, sulfur, potassium, crude protein, neutral-detergent fiber and in vitro digestible dry matter of Marandu palisade grass. Results from field experiments corroborated with greenhouse trial showing decreases on herbage yield varying from 31 to 43% depending on level of fertilization and grazing severity of Marandu palisade grass. Finally, an unprecedented 154-ha field experiment indicated that Mahanarva decreases 74% the beef productivity (i.e. kg body weight ha−1) of Nellore heifers grazing Marandu palisade grass. © 2020, The Author(s).
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2045-2322Publisher
Nature Publishing GroupPublisher DOI
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University of New England; University of Sao Paulo, BrazilEra Eligible
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