Pedro Aguado
Technical University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by Pedro Aguado.
Pest Management Science | 2011
Ignacio Colomer; Pedro Aguado; Pilar Medina; Rosa María Heredia; Alberto Fereres; José E. Belda; Elisa Viñuela
BACKGROUND Frankliniella occidentalis (Pergande) (Thysanoptera: Thripidae) and Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) are among the most serious pests of sweet peppers in greenhouses. Chemical control is difficult because of their high reproductive rates and insecticide resistance, and seasonal inoculative releases of Orius laevigatus (Fieber) and Amblyseius swirskii (Athias-Henriot) are commonly used to reduce their populations. As chemical treatments are often needed in the crop against other pests, the side effects of methoxyfenozide (an insect growth regulator against lepidopteran pests) and flonicamid (a selective feeding inhibitor against sucking insects) were studied in both beneficial organisms in a commercial greenhouse. RESULTS Orius laevigatus and A. swirskii were released at commercial rates (4-5 and 100 m(-2) ), and a strong establishment and a very homogeneous distribution were reached. One pesticide treatment with the maximum field recommended concentration of methoxyfenozide and flonicamid (96 and 100 mg AI L(-1) ) was done when they were well established, and their population levels were not affected either immediately or up to 30 days after treatment. CONCLUSION The results are indicative of no impact of methoxyfenozide and flonicamid on the two natural enemies in the field, and both can be considered as potential alternatives to be included in IPM programmes in sweet pepper.
Journal of Economic Entomology | 2011
A. Adán; Elisa Viñuela; Paloma Bengochea; F. Budia; Pedro Del Estal; Pedro Aguado; Pilar Medina
ABSTRACT Psyttalia concolor (Szèpligeti) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) is a koinobiont endoparasitoid of several species of tephritid (Diptera) larvae, such as Bactrocera oleae (Gmelin) and Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann). Here, we report on the effects of imidacloprid and fipronil on P. concolor females, when different routes of exposure were evaluated: residual contact (cover and bait sprays) and via treatment of host species. Moreover, the persistence of the bait formulated compound also was studied. For each experiment, lethal (mortality) and sublethal effects (parasitization rate or longevity) were studied. Fipronil produced 100% mortality irrespective of exposure route, and it was very persistent, because 34-d-old residues still produced this high mortality rate, being as toxic or even more toxic than the reference product dimethoate. Toxicity of imidacloprid depends on the mode of exposure, although always remained less toxic than dimethoate. Imidacloprid caused high mortality or sublethal effect to the progeny in cover sprays and when applied via treated host, being harmless in bait sprays application. In conclusion, our results suggest that fipronil should not be used in the field when the parasitoid is present. On the contrary, although imidacloprid is physiologically active against females of P. concolor, ecological selectivity may result through the use of bait treatment.
Biocontrol | 2014
S. Legarrea; E. Velázquez; Pedro Aguado; Alberto Fereres; I. Morales; D. Rodríguez; P. Del Estal; Elisa Viñuela
In the search for a durable pest control management, biological control agents and photoselective covers are suitable candidates to be implemented in greenhouse crops. In this work, we studied the effects of a 50 mesh photoselective cover compared to a standard with similar characteristics but without UV-absorbing additives on the performance of Aphidius ervi Haliday (Hymenoptera: Braconidae), a widely used parasitoid to control aphids in vegetable crops. Four field experiments were conducted in La Poveda Experimental Farm (Central Spain) where a lettuce crop was grown during the years 2008–2010. Lettuce plants were infested by Macrosiphum euphorbiae (Thomas) (Hemiptera: Aphididae) and the parasitoid A. ervi was released and monitored throughout the crop cycle to evaluate any constraint in its performance produced by UV-absorbing nets. The ability of A. ervi to find and parasitize the host was not modified by the photoselective cover during the four seasons studied. Thus, we suggest that both strategies could be combined in the context of IPM in vegetable crops where this natural enemy is released.
Tree Physiology | 2012
Pedro Aguado; M. Dolores Curt; Helena Pereira; Jesús Fernández
Carbon distribution in the stem of 2-year-old cork oak plants was studied by (14)CO(2) pulse labeling in late spring in order to trace the allocation of photoassimilates to tissue and biochemical stem components of cork oak. The fate of (14)C photoassimilated carbon was followed during two periods: the first 72 h (short-term study) and the first 52 weeks (long-term study) after the (14)CO(2) photosynthetic assimilation. The results showed that (14)C allocation to stem tissues was dependent on the time passed since photoassimilation and on the season of the year. In the first 3 h all (14)C was found in the polar extractives. After 3 h, it started to be allocated to other stem fractions. In 1 day, (14)C was allocated mostly to vascular cambium and, to a lesser extent, to primary phloem; no presence of (14)C was recorded for the periderm. However, translocation of (14)C to phellem was observed from 1 week after (14)CO(2) pulse labeling. The phellogen was not completely active in its entire circumference at labeling, unlike the vascular cambium; this was the tissue that accumulated most photoassimilated (14)C at the earliest sampling. The fraction of leaf-assimilated (14)C that was used by the stem peaked at 57% 1 week after (14)CO(2) plant exposure. The time lag between C photoassimilation and suberin accumulation was ∼8 h, but the most active period for suberin accumulation was between 3 and 7 days. Suberin, which represented only 1.77% of the stem weight, acted as a highly effective sink for the carbon photoassimilated in late spring since suberin specific radioactivity was much higher than for any other stem component as early as only 1 week after (14)C plant labeling. This trend was maintained throughout the whole experiment. The examination of microautoradiographs taken over 1 year provided a new method for quantifying xylem growth. Using this approach it was found that there was more secondary xylem growth in late spring than in other times of the year, because the calculated average cell division time was much shorter.
Tree Physiology | 2016
Pedro Aguado; M. Dolores Curt; Helena Pereira; Jesús Fernández
The growth pattern of cork oak (Quercus suber L.), an important component of South Mediterranean woodlands, is seasonal. Seasonality has been found for shoot, radial and cork ring growth as well as for carbon (C) photoassimilation, nutrients remobilization and water relations, among other physiological aspects. However, little is known about the seasonality of C allocation to cork oak chemical compounds, including suberin, a major component of cork. In order to achieve this goal, an isotopic tracer experiment was conducted using 18-month-old cork oaks so that the fate of C photoassimilated in different seasons could be traced into biochemical (main organic) stem components. Two distinct patterns of C allocation, associated with the stages of active plant growth and dormancy, were identified and described. Evidence was provided that translocation of photoassimilated C to stems does not cease during the dormancy period and that suberin is the major C sink for the C assimilated throughout the whole active growth period, as compared with other stem components.
Archive | 2018
Javier Ruiz Sánchez; Pedro Aguado; María Dolores Curt; Jesús Fernández
The availability of land for biomass production has become a growing concern worldwide. Principles of sustainability indicate that the bioenergy chain, from biomass production to bioenergy end-uses, should be locally addressed. Thus, regardless of the possibilities that the international biomass trade could offer, each country should assess the size of the land resource that might be available for biomass production in order to establish realistic national targets for bioenergy. This work addresses two key challenges for bioenergy implementation: (i) ‘Do we have land available to accommodate future biomass production?, (ii) ‘What would be the choice of energy crops from the knowledge gained in field experiments?’. Focusing on Spain, an analysis of the evolution of land use is made and changes occurred in the last years are discussed to assess the size of land resource for bioenergy. Subsequently, the suitability of a selection of lignocellulosic energy crops is studied with a view to the potential available lands.
Industrial Crops and Products | 2006
Jesús Fernández; María Dolores Curt; Pedro Aguado
Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2004
María Dolores Curt; Pedro Aguado; G. Sánchez; M. Bigeriego; Jesús Fernández
Industrial Crops and Products | 2006
María Dolores Curt; Pedro Aguado; Marina Sanz; Gema Sánchez; Jesús Fernández
Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science | 2003
Jesús Fernández; M. Dolores Curt; Pedro Aguado; Enrique Magro