Edwin George Rajotte

Edwin George Rajotte
Pennsylvania State University | Penn State · Department of Entomology

Ph.D.

About

363
Publications
209,262
Reads
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3,010
Citations
Additional affiliations
March 1985 - December 2021
Pennsylvania State University
Position
  • Integrated Pest Management, Pollination Ecology
Description
  • Integrated Pest Management, Pollination Ecology, International Development
January 1981 - March 1985
Virginia Tech (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University)
Position
  • Research Associate
Education
August 1975 - December 1980
August 1973 - July 1975
University of Connecticut
Field of study
  • Entomology
August 1969 - May 1973
University of Connecticut
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (363)
Article
Full-text available
Although overall pollinator populations have declined over the last couple of decades, the honey bee (Apis mellifera) malady, colony collapse disorder (CCD), has caused major concern in the agricultural community. Among honey bee pathogens, RNA viruses are emerging as a serious threat and are suspected as major contributors to CCD. Recent detection...
Article
Full-text available
Residual biopesticide treatments of Beauveria bassiana were tested against the bed bug Cimex lectularius. An oil formulation of conidia was applied to different substrates. Bed bugs were exposed for 1 h, transferred to an unsprayed environment and monitored for mortality. Separate bioassays evaluated the effect of bed bug strain, sex, life stage, a...
Article
Full-text available
Chemical control of house flies in poultry production facilities is becoming increasingly difficult due to insecticide resistance and regulatory constraints. Biopesticides based on entomopathogenic fungi could provide an alternative approach. Here we evaluated population control potential of two fungal pathogens, Beauveria bassiana and Metarhizium...
Article
Full-text available
Vector-borne pathogens are known to alter the phenotypes of their primary hosts and vectors, with implications for disease transmission as well as ecology. Here we show that a plant virus, barley yellow dwarf virus, increases the surface temperature of infected host plants (by an average of 2 °C), while also significantly enhancing the thermal tole...
Article
Full-text available
Fungicides are frequently used during tree fruit bloom and can threaten insect pollinators. However, little is known about how non-honey bee pollinators such as the solitary bee, Osmia cornifrons, respond to contact and systemic fungicides commonly used in apple production during bloom. This knowledge gap limits regulatory decisions that determine...
Preprint
Full-text available
Fungicides are frequently used during tree fruit bloom and can threaten insect pollinators. However, little is known about how non-honey bee pollinators such as the solitary bee, Osmia cornifrons , respond to contact and systemic fungicides commonly used in apple production during bloom. This knowledge gap limits regulatory decisions on determining...
Article
Full-text available
The alarming decline of pollinator populations has raised significant concerns worldwide and prompted the need for effective pesticide risk assessment within the Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management (IPPM) framework. This paper examines the diverse approaches to pollinator protection within the pesticide regulatory environments of the United S...
Article
Full-text available
Analysis of ecological and evolutionary aspects leading to durability of resistance in soybean cultivars against species Soybean vein necrosis orthotospovirus (SVNV) (Bunyavirales: Tospoviridae) is important for the establishment of integrated pest management (IPM) across the United States, which is a leading exporter of soybeans in the world. SVNV...
Preprint
Full-text available
The European honey bee, Apis mellifera , serves as the principle managed pollinator species globally. In recent decades, honey bee populations have been facing serious health threats from combined biotic and abiotic stressors, including diseases, limited nutrition, and agrochemical exposure. Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying xenobio...
Article
Full-text available
The frequency and intensity of extreme heat in the environment have increased in the last decade. Extreme heating events (EHE) have wide-ranging impacts on biological systems from the molecular to the community level. However, the impacts of EHE have been poorly studied in pathogen–host systems. Here, we explore how EHE affects the interaction amon...
Article
Full-text available
Different species of bees provide essential ecosystem services by pollinating various agricultural crops, including tree fruits. Many fruits and nuts depend on insect pollination, primarily by wild and managed bees. In different geographical regions where orchard crops are grown, fruit growers rely on wild bees in the farmscape and use orchard bees...
Article
Full-text available
Ticks are able to transmit the highest number of pathogen species of any blood-feeding arthropod and represent a growing threat to public health and agricultural systems worldwide. While there are numerous and varied causes and effects of changes to tick-borne disease (re)emergence, three primary challenges to tick control were identified in this r...
Article
Full-text available
The nexus of art and science will be featured at Science & Rock Fest in 2023 in a most enjoyable fashion. These two worlds are often viewed as incompatible, but both are endeavors where creativity, skills, and motivation converge, resulting in extraordinary works and findings. The project has two components. The first is a series of hands-on worksh...
Article
Full-text available
Habitat selection is a critical process that shapes the spatial distribution of species at local and regional scales. The mechanisms underlying habitat preference rely on environmental factors, species traits, and ecological interactions with other species. Here, we examined spatial segregation between two co-occurring aphid species (Rhopalosiphum...
Article
Full-text available
Soybean vein necrosis orthotospovirus (SVNV: Tospoviridae: Orthotospovirus), the causal agent of soybean vein necrosis disease, is vectored by soybean thrips Neohydatothrips variabilis (Beach, 1896), and to a lesser extent by five other thrips species. There is increasing incidence of soybean vein necrosis (SVN) disease in all soybean growing state...
Article
Full-text available
Honey bees (Apis mellifera) are one of the most important pollinating species of flowering plants. Recently, populations of honey bees have been declining due to a combination of factors, including the widespread use of agricultural pesticides. Laboratory studies were conducted to determine the acute oral toxicity of different formulated pesticides...
Article
Full-text available
Soybean thrips (Neohydatothrips variabilis) are an important phytophagous vector of the widely recognized Soybean vein necrosis orthotospovirus (SVNV). Understanding the egg-laying behavior of these thrips could aid in developing strategies for the management of the vector and virus. In this study, we described the egg-laying behavior of N. variabi...
Preprint
Full-text available
Solitary bees are often exposed to various pesticides applied for pest control on farmland while providing pollination services to food crops. Increasing evidence suggests that sublethal toxicity of agricultural pesticides affects solitary bees differently than the social bees used to determine regulatory thresholds like honey bees and bumblebees....
Chapter
Full-text available
Soybean vein necrosis orthotospovirus (SVNV, Genus: Orthotospovirus, Family: Tospoviridae, Order Bunyavirales) is a vector and seed transmitted virus that infects soybean in different countries around the world. The purpose of this review paper was to provide information about SVNV, its geographic dispersal, vectors, disease transmission mode, alte...
Article
Full-text available
Local adaptations of host plants to climatic conditions along an elevation gradient can affect insect-plant interactions. Using local accessions sampled from different elevations within South America, plant defense responses and herbivore growth were evaluated on two host plants: a) cherry tomato, Solanum lycopersicum var. cerasiforme, and b) wild...
Article
Full-text available
The fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (FAW), first invaded Africa in 2016 and has since become established in many areas across the continent where it poses a serious threat to food and nutrition security. We re-parameterized the existing CLIMEX model to assess the FAW global invasion threat, emphasizing the risk of transient and permanent popul...
Article
Full-text available
For several years, pest management in tomato production in Cambodia has generally focused on the use of synthetic pesticides. We compared conventional pest management (farmers’ traditional practices) with an IPM program on 12 farms in the northwestern part of Cambodia. The IPM program combined cultural, biological, and chemical practices. We found...
Article
Full-text available
Elevation gradients are used as a proxy to simulate climate change effects. A field study was conducted along an elevational gradient in Nepal to understand the effects of abiotic conditions on agriculturally important insect herbivore populations (tobacco caterpillar: Spodoptera litura, tomato fruit worm: Helicoverpa armigera, and South American l...
Article
Full-text available
Pathogens can modify many aspects of host behavior or physiology with cascading impacts across trophic levels in terrestrial food webs. These changes include thermal tolerance of hosts, however the effects of fungal infections on thermal tolerances and behavioral responses to extreme temperatures (ET) across trophic levels have rarely been studied....
Preprint
Full-text available
Pathogens can alter the thermal tolerances of insects; these changes can have cascading impacts across trophic levels in terrestrial food webs. However, the effects of fungal infections on thermal tolerances and behavioral responses to extreme temperatures (ET) across trophic levels have rarely been studied. We examined how a fungal pathogen, Beauv...
Preprint
Full-text available
The fall armyworm, Spodoptera frugiperda (FAW), first invaded Africa in 2016 and has since become established in many areas across the continent where it poses a serious threat to food and nutrition security. We re-parameterized the existing CLIMEX model to assess the FAW global invasion threat, emphasizing the risk of transient and permanent popul...
Article
Full-text available
Honey bees (Apis mellifera) are one of the most important pollinating species of flowering plants. Recently, populations of honey bees have been declining due to a combination of factors, including the widespread use of agricultural pesticides. Laboratory studies were conducted to determine the acute oral toxicity of different formulated pesticides...
Book
Full-text available
Managing Eastern Apple Orchards for Pollinators and Other Beneficial Insects: Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management, Habitat Enhancement, and Managed Bees
Article
Full-text available
The genetic sexing strain (GSS) of the Mediterranean fruit fly (Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann)) Vienna 8 D53− is based on a male-linked translocation system and uses two selectable markers for male-only production, the white pupae (wp) and the temperature sensitivity lethal (tsl) genes. In this GSS, males emerge from brown pupae and are resistant t...
Book
Full-text available
In 2002, Pennsylvania enacted legislation mandating the adoption of an integrated pest management (IPM) plan for each school district, intermediate unit, and area vocational-technical school in the state, and a 72-hour notification and posting period prior to pesticide use in schools or on school grounds. In 2012, the Pennsylvania Department of Agr...
Article
Full-text available
The effect of temperature on insect-plant interactions in the face of changing climate is complex as the plant, its herbivores and their interactions are usually affected differentially leading to an asymmetry in response. Using experimental warming and a combination of biochemical and herbivory bioassays, the effects of elevated temperatures and h...
Article
Full-text available
Developing a lifelong marking method for Lycorma delicatula (White, 1845) is crucial to investigate ecological processes. Here we validate a marking method using stable isotope enrichment (15N) of host plants to track spotted lanternfly (SLF), an invasive species causing economic damage on grapes, hardwood forest and landscape tree species. To vali...
Article
Full-text available
Adopting an Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management strategy requires an evaluation of pesticide risk for pollinator species. For non-Apid species, however, the standardized ingestion assays are difficult to implement. This hinders the consideration of non-Apid species in farm management strategies and government regulatory processes. We describe...
Article
Full-text available
Pollinators provide a crucial ecosystem service by pollinating commercially cultivated crops, but they are frequently exposed to various agricultural chemicals used for pest management. In this study, we assessed the potential exposure of pollinators to various systemic insecticides and a fungicide used in apple orchards. Residue levels were determ...
Article
Full-text available
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
Article
Full-text available
Ticks can vector and transmit many pathogens and pose a serious human health threat throughout the world. After collection, many diagnostic laboratories must mechanically disrupt tick specimens for diagnostic testing and research purposes, but few studies have evaluated how well-commercial tissue homogenizers perform this task. We evaluated four co...
Article
Full-text available
Adopting an Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management strategy requires an evaluation of pesticide risk for pollinator species. For non-Apid species, however, the standardized ingestion assays are difficult to implement. This hinders the consideration of non-Apid species in farm management strategies and government regulatory processes. We describe...
Book
Full-text available
This manual provides information and instruction for managing pests on school grounds using integrated pest management.
Article
Full-text available
Natural habitats, comprised of various flowering plant species, provide food and nesting resources for pollinator species and other beneficial arthropods. Loss of such habitats in agricultural regions and in other human-modified landscapes could be a factor in recent bee declines. Artificially established floral plantings may offset these losses. A...
Article
Full-text available
Natural habitats, comprised of various flowering plant species, provide food and nesting resources for pollinator species and other beneficial arthropods. Loss of such habitats in agricultural regions and in other human-modified landscapes could be a factor in recent bee declines. Artificially established floral plantings may offset these losses. A...
Article
Full-text available
Gravid female mushroom sciarid flies, Lycoriella ingenua (Dufour:1839) (Diptera:Sciaridae), were confirmed in laboratory experiments as vectors for the fungal pathogen Trichoderma aggressivum f. aggressivum (Samuels and Gams), causal agent of mushroom green mold disease in mushroom farming. The gravid females acquired the fungal spores when exposed...
Article
Full-text available
Crop domestication and selective breeding have altered plant defense mechanisms, influencing insect-plant interactions. A reduction in plant resistance/tolerance against herbivory is generally expected in domesticated species, however, limited efforts have been made to compare inducibility of plant defenses between wild and domesticated genotypes....
Article
Full-text available
The Lyonet's gland is a widespread accessory labial gland in Lepidoptera. Although its function is ambiguous, the Lyonet's gland arguably plays an important role in silk production. Our knowledge of the Lyonet's gland in heliothine species is extremely limited; it is reportedly missing from Helicoverpa armigera and Heliothis virescens, whereas it i...
Article
Mango (Mangifera indica L.) is a major fruit crop throughout the tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world including Bangladesh. The Oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae) is a major pest of mango causing both quantitative and qualitative losses as well as export barriers. We compared the efficacy and economic...
Article
Full-text available
The mushroom phorid fly, Megaselia halterata (Wood) (Diptera: Phoridae), is a key pest in mushroom farming in most parts of the world. Studies on the mushroom phorid fly have focused on its life history within mushroom growing houses, but little is known about the fly's activity outside mushroom growing houses. In this study, daily activity and dis...
Article
Full-text available
Barley yellow dwarf (BYD) has been described as the most devastating cereal grain disease worldwide causing between 11% and 33% yield loss in wheat fields. There has been little focus on management of the disease in the literature over the past twenty years, although much of the United States still suffers disease outbreaks. With this review, we pr...
Article
Full-text available
Adopting an Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management strategy requires an evaluation of pesticide risk for pollinator species. For non-Apid species, however, the standardized ingestion assays are difficult to implement. This hinders the consideration of non-Apid species in farm management strategies and government regulatory processes. We describe...
Article
Full-text available
Among the various potential vegetables, tomato is one of the high value crops, with growing market demand and higher level of return per hector. South American Tomato leaf miner, Tuta absoluta is one of the main constrains in tomato production in Nepal. Field experiments were conducted from June to October 2017 to determine the attractive action of...
Article
Full-text available
A study was carried out to document occurrence of Tuta absoluta and current management practices adopted by farmers in Lalitpur district (Lele VDC) where a total of 70 respondents were interviewed using random sampling method. The study comprises three target groups viz. structured questionnaire survey of farmers growing tomatoes (50); structured q...
Article
Full-text available
Pathogens and other parasites can have profound effects on biological communities and ecosystems. Here we explore how two strains of a plant virus - Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus, BYDV - influence the foraging performance and fecundity of two aphid species: Rhopalosiphum maidis and R. padi. We found that pre-inhabitation by R. padi on plants facilitate...
Article
Full-text available
Vegetable farming has become a profitable business in terai, mid-hills and other subtropical belts of Nepal. Lele, VDC of Lalitpur district and Kushadevi, VDC of kavre district are one of the commercial vegetable pockets in the Bagmati zone of central Nepal. A study was carried out from July to December, 2017 in order to collect the information reg...
Article
Full-text available
Pollinator declines coupled with increasing demand for insect pollinated crops have the potential to cause future pollinator shortages for our most nutritious and valuable crops. Ensuring adequate crop pollination may necessitate a shift in pollination management, from one that primarily relies on the managed European honeybee ( Apis mellifera L.)...
Article
Full-text available
The mushroom fly, Lycoriella ingenua Dufour (Diptera: Sciaridae), is a pest in white button mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) farming in North America. The main risk associated with sciarid flies inside mushroom farms is that the adult can potentially vector mushroom green mold disease caused by the pathogenic fungus Trichoderma aggressivum Samuels & W....
Preprint
Full-text available
The Lyonet’s gland is a widespread accessory labial gland in Lepidoptera. Albeit its function is ambiguous, the Lyonet’s gland arguably plays an important role in silk production. Our knowledge on the Lyonet’s gland in heliothine species is limited; it is apparently missing from H. armigera and Heliothis virescence, whereas reduced in size in H. ze...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is one of the most important vegetable crops, offering great income and employment generation potential to small-holders in Nepal. Production of this crop is limited by several biotic and abiotic factors. Among several pests attacking tomato, the invasive leafminer, Tuta absoluta (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) has become v...
Article
Full-text available
Context The positive correlation between landscape area of semi-natural habitat and wild pollinator richness and abundance in agroecosystems has been well studied. However, we lack a deep understanding of local scale floral resource and nest provisioning for wild bees necessary to optimize implementation of pollinator conservation practices. Object...
Technical Report
Full-text available
Field data from various field trials on pest, beneficial biocontrol, and pollinators is presented.
Conference Paper
Integrated Pest and Pollinator Management (IPPM) is an emerging strategy of pollinator-friendly integrated pest management practices in various agricultural crops. Specifically, the IPPM approach takes pollinator health into consideration while formulating and implementing pest management programs in agriculture and other ecosystems. On commercial...
Article
Full-text available
Apple orchard management practices may affect development and phenology of arthropod pests, such as the codling moth (CM), Cydia pomonella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), which is a serious internal fruit-feeding pest of apples worldwide. Estimating population dynamics and accurately predicting the timing of CM development and phenology events (fo...
Article
Full-text available
Landscapes of farms and adjacent areas are known to influence abundance of various arthropods such as pollinators in commercial agricultural ecosystems. In this context, we examined the effect of heterogeneous landscapes surrounding and including commercial apple orchards on pollinator visitation and foraging distance during bloom period from 2011...
Chapter
Full-text available
Over- and misuse of chemical pesticides in vegetables in Nepal have brought about a renewed interest in Integrated Pest Management (IPM) both from public and research sectors. Through the support of the USAID-funded Integrated Pest Management Innovation Lab (IPM IL), full season IPM packages for important vegetable crops; tomato, cucumber and cauli...
Article
Full-text available
Codling moth (CM), Cydia pomonella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) is a major fruit feeding pest of apples. Understanding susceptibility differences of various apple cultivars to CM oviposition is an important step in developing resistant varieties as well as monitoring and management strategies for this pest in apple orchards planted with mixed-cu...
Technical Report
Full-text available
In November 2012, a diverse group of 26 professionals from business, non-profits and governments gathered in Chevy Chase, Maryland to share ideas on how best to improve communication, understanding and outcomes among those working on organic systems and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) in agriculture and food production. Over two days, this group w...
Article
Full-text available
Wild pollinators supply essential, historically undervalued pollination services to crops and other flowering plant communities with great potential to ensure agricultural production against the loss of heavily relied upon managed pollinators. Local plant communities provision wild bees with crucial floral and nesting resources, but the distributio...
Article
Full-text available
The brown marmorated stink bug, Halyomorpha halys (Stål), feeds on a variety of fruits and vegetables, and is an economically important invasive hemipteran pest. Trap cropping of H. halys was examined at the Pennsylvania State University Southeast Agriculture Research and Extension Center (SEAREC) in Lancaster Co., PA, from 2012 to 2013, with sunfl...
Article
Full-text available
Bees are important pollinators of numerous crops, and monitoring their abundance and diversity in commercial agricultural ecosystems is of increasing importance due to pollinator declines. In season-long field studies conducted in Pennsylvania during 2011-2013, we evaluated five different bee monitoring passive traps - three pan traps (blue, yellow...
Article
Full-text available
Highlights • Pesticide use in crops can be harmful to pollinators, but each pesticide type differentially affects various pollinator species including honey bees, bumble bees and solitary bees. • Expanding integrated pest management (IPM) to integrated pest and pollinator management (IPPM) will incorporate pollinator protection into the pest manage...
Article
Full-text available
Recent studies suggest the potential for use of oil formulations of the entomopathogenic fungus, Beauveria bassiana as residual sprays for control of house flies in poultry production facilities. The current study investigated the influence of biotic and abiotic factors on biopesticide persistence. We found that flies physically removed and deactiv...
Article
Full-text available
Bees are important pollinators of numerous crops, and monitoring their abundance and diversity in commercial agricultural ecosystems is of increasing importance due to pollinator declines. In season-long field studies conducted in Pennsylvania during 2011-2013, we evaluated five different bee monitoring passive traps –three pan traps (blue, yellow,...
Article
Full-text available
Entomopathogenic fungi, such as Beauveria bassiana, offer potential for use as biopesticides for control of house flies in poultry production facilities. This study evaluates persistence and efficacy of oil-formulated B. bassiana conidia against adult house flies on a range of structural substrates commonly found in poultry houses. Exposure of flie...
Article
Full-text available
Seeds may be receptive to plant defense acti-vators such as b-amino butyric acid and jasmonic acid, conferring protection to the subsequent plant against a wide spectrum of plant pathogens and insects. We examined the independent and interactive effects of methyl jasmonate (MeJA) seed treatment on tomato fruit worm (Helicoverpa zea) larval growth a...
Article
Full-text available
Chemical control of house flies in poultry production facilities is becoming increasingly difficult due to insecticide resistance and regulatory constraints. Biopesti-cides based on entomopathogenic fungi could provide an alternative approach. Here we evaluated population control potential of two fungal pathogens, Beauveria bassiana and Metarhizium...
Conference Paper
Control strategies for house flies in commercial poultry houses can include cultural, biological and chemical tactics; however, use of broad-spectrum chemicals is thought to be the only reliable tool to manage ‘fly burst’ situations. Our aim was to exploit post-eclosion resting behaviors of teneral flies to evaluate the population control potential...
Article
Full-text available
Plants express inducible direct and indirect defenses in response to herbivory. The plant hormone jasmonic acid (JA) and related signaling compounds referred to as jasmonates play a central role in regulating defense responses to a wide range of herbivores.We assessed whether treating tomato seeds with 0.8 mM of methyl jasmonate (MeJA) affected the...
Article
Full-text available
Knowledge of development of the bed bug Cimex lectularius L. (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) under specific environmental conditions could lead to improved management techniques. Developmental rates, age-, and stage-specific life tables were compared for a laboratory strain and a field strain of bed bugs reared on human blood. Both strains were then cross...
Article
Full-text available
Recently, there has been a lot of press related to pollinator health, and some troubling information indicates that certain fungicides, when used during bloom, can negatively affect the health of honey bees. This is a complicated problem with the solutions relying on understanding the detailed relationships among chemicals, pollinators and pest man...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
We examined the effect of heterogeneous landscapes surrounding commercial apple orchards on pollinator visitation by exploring the following two questions: 1) How does proximity to natural woodland affect pollinator foraging distances into an orchard? 2) How does the surrounding landscape context affect visitation rates to apple flowers? Our study,...

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