Full Article: PDF
Scientific Object Identifier: http://s-o-i.org/1.1/TAS-12-116-18
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.15863/TAS.2022.12.116.18
Language: English
Citation: Nuralieva, D. S. (2022). Pest and disease control in the greenhouse. ISJ Theoretical & Applied Science, 12 (116), 177-181. Soi: http://s-o-i.org/1.1/TAS-12-116-18 Doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.15863/TAS.2022.12.116.18 |
Pages: 177-181
Published: 30.12.2022
Abstract: The right selection and application of pesticides when necessary, along with early detection and diagnosis, are essential to greenhouse pest management. Aphids, fungus gnats, thrips, whiteflies, caterpillars, leafminers, mealybugs, mites, slugs, and snails are some typical and significant pests to keep an eye out for. Aphid feeding can cause stems or leaves to pucker or curl; this leaf distortion frequently shields aphids from contact insecticides. Each female plant in a greenhouse is able to give live birth to daughters seven days after its own birth. Winged aphids typically enter the greenhouse through openings to start an infestation. Thrips are little, thin insects that are around 1/25 of an inch long. They have four wings that are kept flat over their backs and are each fringed with a row of long hairs. Nymphs eat similarly to adults and go through four molts as they grow. Leafminers are tiny fly larvae that eat their host's leaves. By eating between the upper and bottom surfaces of the leaf, they harm plants. When completely developed, the larva can emerge from the leaf or pupate on the ground or it can pupate in the leaf tissue.
Key words: pest, control, greenhouse, disease, insect, cultural, systems.
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