Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/48733
Title: Remote sensing and management of leaf-cutting ants and lepidopteran defoliators in eucalyptus plantations
Other Titles: Sensoriamento remoto e o manejo de formigas cortadeiras e lepidópteros desfolhadores em plantações de eucalipto
Authors: Zanetti, Ronald
Santos, Alexandre dos
Tavares, André Luiz Batista
Acerbi Junior, Fausto Weimar
Zanuncio, José Cola
Keywords: Formigas cortadeiras
Lepidópteros
Pragas - Sensoriamento remoto
Formicidae
Eucalipto - Doenças e pragas
Leaf-cutting ants
Lepidopterans
Pests - Remote Sensing
Eucalyptus - Diseases and pests
Issue Date: 27-Dec-2021
Publisher: Universidade Federal de Lavras
Citation: SILVA, J. C. C. Remote sensing and management of leaf-cutting ants and lepidopteran defoliators in eucalyptus plantations. 2021. 69 p. Tese (Doutorado em Entomologia) – Universidade Federal de Lavras, Lavras, 2021.
Abstract: Eucalyptus plantations provide the main raw material for the Brazilian forest sector and, as in other cultures, insect pests, mainly leaf-cutting ants and defoliating Lepidoptera, can reduce its productivity. Infestation and damage by these species need to be monitored to reduce losses to producers, which can be done by remote sensing. This work approaches two forms of remote sensing for the management of forest pests. In the first article, it was used to verify the influence of landscape on the infestation of new leaf-cutting ant nests in eucalyptus plantations. The presence of a higher percentage of areas with native forest in the neighborhood reduces the number of new nests in the eucalyptus trees, in contrast to pasture areas. In the second article, remote sensing was used to detect areas damaged by leaf-cutting ants and Lepidoptera and the possibility of identifying damage by imaging. The accuracy to identify healthy areas attacked by these insects was high. Light reflectance differed between damaged and non-damaged areas. The reflectance pattern in areas defoliated by leaf-cutting ants was not very different, but it was differentiated from areas with healthy trees in most of the response variables. Remote sensing can be used to monitor pests in eucalyptus plantations
URI: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/48733
Appears in Collections:Entomologia - Doutorado (Teses)



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