Altair Arlindo Semeão
Kansas State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Altair Arlindo Semeão.
Biological Agriculture & Horticulture | 2003
Alfredo Henrique Rocha Gonring; Marcelo Coutinho Picanço; José Cola Zanuncio; Mário Puiatti; Altair Arlindo Semeão
ABSTRACT A field study was conducted to determine the natural biological control and key mortality factors of the pickleworm, Diaphania nitidalis Stoll (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), in two cucumber varieties. Field data for mortality factors were used to construct an ecological life table for this pest. Predation by Paratrechina sp. (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and parasitism by Trichogramma pretiosum Riley (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) were the most important mortality factors for the egg stage of D. nitidalis, whereas the most important factor for the pupal stage was predation by Labidus coecus Latr. (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Larval phase was the critical mortality stage, and third and fifth instars were the critical mortality ones. Key mortality factors of D. nitidalis were predation of its larva by Polybia ignobillis Haliday (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) in the third instar and impact of rainfall during fifth instar.
Neotropical Entomology | 2008
Leandro Bacci; Marcelo Coutinho Picanço; Marcelo Fialho de Moura; Altair Arlindo Semeão; Flávio Lemes Fernandes; Elisangela Gomes Fidelis de Morais
This work determines the best technique, sampling unit and the number of samples to compose a sampling plan for Frankliniella schultzei (Trybom) and Thrips palmi (Karny) (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) on cucumber. The efficacy of three sampling techniques: leaf beating on a plastic tray, direct counting of insects on the lower leaf surface, and whole leaf collection in bags were compared in nine commercial cucumber crops using three sampling units (a leaf from a branch located in the apical, median or basal third of the canopy). The number of samples was determined based on the relative variance and the economic precision for the best technique and sampling unit. The direct counting of insects on the apical third of the plant canopy was the best sampling technique for F. schultzei based on one leaf surveyed per plant using 38 plants per field. The best sampling technique for T. palmi was the leaf beating on a tray using one leaf of the apical third per plant and 35 plants per field. When joining both species, the best sampling system was the direct counting on the apical third, and it requires sampling one leaf per plant using at least 35 plants per field. These results facilitate the decision-making for the management of thrips on cucumber and aggregate the benefits of the correct decision for the adoption of strategies for population reduction.
Environmental Entomology | 2012
Altair Arlindo Semeão; James F. Campbell; Richard W. Beeman; Marcé D. Lorenzen; R. Jeff Whitworth; Phillip E. Sloderbeck
ABSTRACT The red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum (Herbst), is primarily found associated with human structures such as wheat and rice mills. Such structures are predicted to be spatially isolated resource patches with frequent population bottlenecks that should influence their genetic structure. Genetic diversity and differentiation among nine populations of T. castaneum collected from wheat and rice mills (ranging from <1–5,700 km apart) were investigated using eight polymorphic loci (microsatellites and other insertion-deletion polymorphisms, each with 3–14 alleles). Seventy-two locus-by-population combinations were evaluated, of which 31 deviated significantly from Hardy—Weinberg equilibrium, all because of a deficiency of heterozygotes. AMOVA analysis indicated significant differences among populations, with 8.3% of the variation in allele frequency resulting from comparisons among populations, and commodity type and geographic region not significant factors. Although there were significant differences in genetic differentiation among populations (FST values = 0.018–0.149), genetic distance was not significantly correlated with geographic distance. Correct assignment to the source population was successful for only 56% of individuals collected. Further analyses confirmed the occurrence of recent genetic bottlenecks in five out of nine populations. These results provide evidence that populations of T. castaneum collected from mills show spatial genetic structure, but the poor ability to assign individuals to source populations and lack of isolation by distance suggest greater levels of gene flow than predicted originally.
Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2011
Flávio Lemes Fernandes; Marcelo Coutinho Picanço; Pablo Costa Gontijo; Maria Elisa de Sena Fernandes; Eliseu José Guedes Pereira; Altair Arlindo Semeão
The green scale, Coccus viridis (Green) (Hemiptera: Coccidae), is an insect pest of coffee and several other perennial cultivated plant species. We investigated changes in alkaloid and phenolic contents in coffee plants as a response to herbivory by this insect. Greenhouse‐grown, 11‐month‐old coffee plants were artificially infested with the coccid and compared with control, uninfested plants. Leaf samples were taken at 15, 30, 45, and 60 days after infestation, and high‐performance liquid chromatography was used to identify and quantify alkaloid and phenolic compounds induced by the coccids at each sampling date. Of the compounds investigated, caffeine was the main coffee alkaloid detected in fully developed leaves, and its concentration in infested plants was twice as high as in the control plants. The main coffee phenolics were caffeic and chlorogenic acid, and a significant increase in their concentrations occurred only in plants infested by C. viridis. A positive and significant relationship was found between alkaloid and phenolic concentrations and the infestation level by adults and nymphs of C. viridis. Caffeine and chlorogenic acid applied on coffee leaves stimulated the locomotory activity of the green scale, thus reducing their feeding compared to untreated leaves. This is the first study to show increased levels of coffee alkaloids and phenolics in response to herbivory by scale insects. The elevation of caffeine and chlorogenic acid levels in coffee leaves because of C. viridis infestation seems to affect this generalist insect by stimulating the locomotion of crawlers.
Journal of Insect Science | 2012
Elisangela Gomes Fidelis de Morais; Marcelo Coutinho Picanço; Altair Arlindo Semeão; Robert W. Barreto; Jander Fagundes Rosado; Júlio Cláudio Martins
Abstract This work investigated eight species of Lepidoptera associated with Miconia calvescens DC. (Myrtales: Melastomataceae) in Brazil, including six defoliators, Salbia lotanalis Druce (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae), Druentia inscita Schaus (Mimallonidae), Antiblemma leucocyma Hampson (Noctuidae), three Limacodidae species, a fruit borer Carposina cardinata Meyrick (Carposinidae), and a damager of flowers Pleuroprucha rudimentaria Guenée (Geometridae). Based on host specificity and the damage caused to plants, S. lotanalis and D. inscita are the most promising species for biological control of M. calvescens. Furthermore, if C. cardinata and P. rudimentaria have host specificity in future tests, these caterpillars could also be considered as appropriate biocontrol agents.
Journal of Stored Products Research | 2011
Altair Arlindo Semeão; James F. Campbell; R. Jeff Whitworth; Phillip E. Sloderbeck
Archive | 2005
Marcelo Coutinho Picanço; Robert W. Barreto; Elisangela Gomes Fidelis; Altair Arlindo Semeão; Jander Fagundes Rosado; Shaiene Costa Moreno; Emersom Cristi de Barros; Gerson Adriano Silva; Tracy Johnson
Journal of Stored Products Research | 2013
Altair Arlindo Semeão; James F. Campbell; R. Jeff Whitworth; Phillip E. Sloderbeck
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2013
Altair Arlindo Semeão; James F. Campbell; J. M. Shawn Hutchinson; R. Jeff Whitworth; Phillip E. Sloderbeck
Julius-Kühn-Archiv | 2010
Altair Arlindo Semeão; James F. Campbell; Richard W. Beeman; R. J. Whitworth; P. E. Sloderbeck; Marcé D. Lorenzen
Collaboration
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Elisangela Gomes Fidelis de Morais
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
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