Refine your search
Collections
Co-Authors
Journals
Year
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z All
Aafreen Rehman, Sheikh
- Diversity and Abundance of Hoppers on Different Field Crops in North Kashmir
Abstract Views :111 |
PDF Views:91
Authors
Affiliations
1 Division of Entomology, Faculty of Agriculture, SKUAST Kashmir, Wadura Sopore 193201, Jammu and Kashmir, IN
2 Department of Entomology, GBPUA&T Pantnagar - 263145, Uttarakhand, IN
1 Division of Entomology, Faculty of Agriculture, SKUAST Kashmir, Wadura Sopore 193201, Jammu and Kashmir, IN
2 Department of Entomology, GBPUA&T Pantnagar - 263145, Uttarakhand, IN
Source
Indian Journal of Entomology, Vol 84, No 4 (2022), Pagination: 850-853Abstract
The present study was conducted on hemipteran hoppers during 2017-2018 at six locations viz. Wadura, Arampora, Dangiwacha, Imberzalwari from District Baramulla and Chogul and Chetkak from Kupwara in Kashmir. The purpose of was to evaluate the preference of the hoppers among various field crops and to the variations in their diversity. Diversity indices such as species diversity index, species evenness index, species richness index and relative abundance were evaluated. Ten species of hoppers were observed on seven field crops, and include Empoasca decipiens, Amrasca biguttula, Maiestas dorsalis, Macrosteles quadrilineatus, Macrosteles sexnotatus, Laodelphax striatellus, Agallia spp., Gurawa minorcephala, Platymetopius fidelis and Deltocephalus spp. There was maximum abundance of M. dorsalis on rice, E. decepiens on maize, M. quadrilineatus on oats and wheat and A. biguttula on French bean, sunflower and soyabean.Keywords
Abundance, diversity, hoppers, field crops, damage, vectors, insects, hopper burn, species and KashmirReferences
- Dyck V A, Thomas B. 1979. The brown plant hopper problem. In: Brown plant hopper: threat to rice production in Asia. Manila (Philippines): International Rice Research Institute. pp. 3-17.
- Joshi P. C, Kumar K, Manoj A. 2008. Assessment of insect diversity along an altitudinal gradient in Pinderi forests of western Himalayas, India. Journal of Asia Pacific Entomology 11: 5-11.
- Lassau S A, Hochuli D F, Cassis G, Reid C A M. 2005. Effects of habitat complexity on forest beetle diversity: do functional groups respond consistently? Diversity and Distributions 11: 73-82.
- Naseri B, Fathipora Y, Talebi A A. 2009. Population density and spatial distribution pattern of Empoasca decepiens (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) on different bean species. Journal of Agricultural Science and Technology 11: 239-248.
- Nielson M W. 1968. The leafhopper vectors of phytopathogenic viruses (Homoptera, Cicadellidae). Taxonomy, biology and virus transmission. United States Department of Agriculture Technical Bulletin No. 1382. 386 pp.
- Pielou E C. 1975. Ecological biodiversity. Wiley, New York. Reddy P P, Rao V R S. 2001. Leafhopper fauna associated with vegetable crops of Andhra Pradesh in India. Entomon 26(2): 121-130.
- Reissig W H, Heinrichs E A, Litsinger J A, Moody K, Fiedler L, Mew T W. 1986. Illustrated guide to integrated pest management in rice in tropical Asia. Manila (Philippines): International Rice Research Institute. 411 pp.
- Shannon C E, Wiener W. 1963. The mathematical theory of communications. University of Illinois Press. Bulletin of Systematic Technology 27: 379-423.
- Thirumalai G, Prabakaran S. 2014. A Checklist of Membracidae from India Southern regional centre, Zoological Survey of India, Chennai. pp: 1-11.
- Wasowska M. 2004. Impact of humidity and mowing on chrysomelid communities (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) in meadows of the Wierzbanowka valley (Pogorze Wielickie hills, Southern Poland). Biologia 59: 601-611.
- Zahniser J N, Dietrich C H. 2013. A review of the tribes of Deltocephalinae (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Cicadellidae) European Journal of Taxonomy 45: 1-211.