SINCE 1994! We are specialists in plant protection in Organic Agriculture and Integrated Production.

30 anos PME Líder’24
Biological and Plant-based Insecticides Fungicides and Elicitors Mating Disruption Traps, Attractants and Pheromones Biofertilizers

 


    Hoplocampa brevis

    1. Identification

    • Common name: Pear sawfly
    • Scientific name: Hoplocampa brevis Klug
    • Order: Hymenoptera
    • Family: Tenthredinidae

    2. Pest description

    • Small adults (4–6 mm), yellowish-brown body.
    • Transparent wings with the venation typical of the Tenthredinidae.
    • Whitish to light green larvae, resembling small caterpillars.
    • Larvae develop inside the young fruit.
    • Pupation in the soil, in resistant cocoons.

    3. Main hosts

    • Pear tree (main host).
    • It may occasionally affect other species of Pyrus.
    • Damage is more frequent in traditional and lower-intervention orchards.

    4. Symptoms and damage

    • Punctures in the young fruit shortly after petal fall.
    • Fruit with internal galleries and gum exudation.
    • Premature fruit drop (“maggoty fruit”).
    • Significant reduction in effective fruit set.
    • More severe damage in years of abundant flowering.

    5. Biological cycle

    • One generation per year.
    • Adults emerge in spring, coinciding with pear flowering.
    • Oviposition in flowers or newly formed fruit.
    • Larvae develop inside the fruit for 3–4 weeks.
    • Pupation in the soil during summer and winter.
    • Emergence synchronised with the start of the next flowering.

    6. Monitoring

    • Observation of flowers and young fruit after petal fall.
    • Fruit sampling to detect larval galleries.
    • White or yellow traps to capture adults during flowering.
    • Recording of flowering dates to predict adult emergence.
    • Annual monitoring to assess risk and the need for intervention.

    7. Management measures

    • Cultural: shallow tillage of the soil in winter to expose pupae, removal of attacked fruit and proper canopy management to reduce favourable microclimates.
    • Biological: conservation of natural enemies, application of entomopathogens to the soil and promotion of specific parasitoids when present.
    • Integrated protection: monitoring during flowering, use of traps for early detection, targeted treatments only at the critical post-flowering moment and integration of cultural practices to reduce the annual population.

    Bibliographic references

    • EPPO Global Database – Hoplocampa spp..
    • CABI Invasive Species Compendium – Hoplocampa brevis.
    • Blommers, L. H. M. et al. (2003). Biology and control of sawflies in pome fruits.
    • Cross, J. V. et al. (1999). Pests of pome fruit in temperate regions.

     

    Plant Protection Product

    Plant protection products require an Applicator Card or a Responsible Technician Card.

    • Add to Cart

      You may use another person card, provided that person takes responsibility for applying the treatment.
      Check here Law No. 26/2013 of 11 April (Distribution, sale and application of phytopharmaceutical products).

      * Mandatory fields
    Subscribe to our Newsletter