Dirk Ebbinghaus
Bayer
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Featured researches published by Dirk Ebbinghaus.
Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2000
Peter Lösel; Gunter Penners; Roel P.J. Potting; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Alfred Elbert; Jürgen Scherkenbeck
A viscous formulation based on castor oil containing the pyrethroid insecticide cyfluthrin and E8, E10‐dodecadienol, the main component of the codling moth sex pheromone, (Cydia pomonella L.: Tortricidae, Olethreutinae) was developed. The insecticidal performance of the formulation was evaluated in the laboratory using a tarsal‐contact bioassay. The pheromone dosage required to attract male moths to the formulation was determined in behavioural tests performed in a wind tunnel. The efficacy of formulations applied to seedlings of the host plant was further investigated in glasshouse experiments conducted with male moths in small wire‐gauze cages. The laboratory tests resulted in a formulation for preliminary field trials containing 4% cyfluthrin and 0.1% pheromone. During the 1995 growing season, experiments were conducted in apple orchards at three locations in Germany. The formulation was first applied to the bark of apple trees (Malus domestica) in mid May and then again in late July. A good level of control, comparable with a spray treatment using the insect growth regulator Alsystin was achieved. The potential of the attract and kill strategy, combining selective attraction of a pest species with the efficacy associated with a pyrethroid insecticide treatment, as a means of controlling the codling moth in commercial apple growing, is discussed.
Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2003
Jörg Romeis; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Jürgen Scherkenbeck
The onion fly Delia antiqua is a specialist herbivore attacking only onions and closely related Allium species. n-Dipropyl disulfide (Pr2S2) has long been known to be attractive to onion flies in the laboratory and in the field. However, the insects response is highly variable. Using behavioral bioassays we found that Pr2S2 was highly attractive to gravid, mated female onion flies, but did not stimulate oviposition. The response of female onion flies was concentration dependent. The physiological state of the flies (i.e., age, mating status, egg load/oviposition experience) also affected their responsiveness. The response of both sexes of onion flies varied with age, but females were always more strongly attracted than males. Responsiveness of females increased during the first 10 days after emergence. It stayed at a high level until 21 days after which the experiment was terminated. The responsiveness of males reached a maximum at 6–7 days after which it declined. Mated, gravid females responded more strongly to Pr2S2 than unmated, gravid females. Females deprived of the opportunity to oviposit were more attracted compared to females that had oviposited on cut onions prior to the experiment. Electroantennograms (EAG) of females revealed a higher response to stimulation compared to males. The EAG-response of females was not affected by mating status.
Archive | 2007
Peter Marczok; Peter Baur; Ronald Vermeer; Wolfgang Thielert; Heike Hungenberg; Kai-Uwe Brueggen; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Peter Lösel; Udo Reckmann
Archive | 2008
Isolde Häuser-Hahn; Peter Howard Davies; Ulrike Wachendorff-Neumann; Klaus Dr. Kirsch; Dirk Ebbinghaus
Pest Management Science | 2002
Peter Lösel; R.P.J. Potting; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Jürgen Scherkenbeck
Archive | 2010
Peter Howard Davies; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Andreas Görtz; Stéphane Carbonne
Archive | 2007
Dirk Ebbinghaus; Andreas Hinterhuber; Wolfgang Thielert; Heike Hungenberg; Holger Weckwert
Archive | 2010
Dirk Ebbinghaus; Isolde Häuser-Hahn; Jan Dittgen
Archive | 2010
Peter Howard Davies; Andreas Görtz; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Stéphane Carbonne
Archive | 2008
Reiner Fischer; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Jürgen Kühnhold; Wolfgang Thielert; Yumi Hattori; Haruko Sawada