Pinworm damages tomato crop in Kolar, Chickballapur districts

‘There is no effective pesticide available to prevent pinworm attack’

August 31, 2015 12:00 am | Updated March 29, 2016 06:12 pm IST - Kolar:

Pinworm not only feasts on leaves of tomato plants but also on the fruit.

Pinworm not only feasts on leaves of tomato plants but also on the fruit.

Even as the tomato farmers are reeling under huge loss due to the steep fall in prices, the cultivators are worried about the prospects of damage to their crop due to pinworm attack.

Experts from a number of agricultural and horticultural farming agencies have found that pinworm, a fruit borer, is attacking the tomato crop in Kolar and Chickballapur districts where it is cultivated on a large scale.

Unlike the leaf minor, which was pestering the farmers in the past by eating up only the leaves of the tomato plants, pinworm is attacking and destroying all parts of the plant, including stems, leaves and the mature fruit, thus impacting both the quality and quantity of this fruit.

According to D.C. Halalingaiah, Senior Assistant Director, Horticulture Department, it is also called ‘South American Pinworm’ as it has its origin in that part of the world.

“Pinworm attack on tomato plants is seen more in Kolar and Chickballapur because of dry weather condition than it is found in Bengaluru Rural and Ramanagaram,” according to Mr. Halalingaiah. He told The Hindu that though there is no effective pesticide available so far for this newly detected insect, a number of guidelines have been framed to control it. Experts from the Regional Research and Extension Division of Gandhi Krishi Vignan Kendra (GKVK), Bengaluru, and the Indian Horticultural Research Centre at Hesaraghatta in Bengaluru conducted a joint survey to assess the loss that tomato cultivators have suffered, and then they have suggested some precautionary measures to control the pinworm attack on tomato plants.

The pinworm attack on tomato plants has resulted in reduced arrivals in the market. The Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee (APMC) yard in Kolar is receiving only 6,600 tonnes of tomato on an average as against 10,000 tonnes to 12,000 tonnes a day in the past. Farmers are not bothering to harvest the crop as it won’t fetch the price they aspire for in the market.

G. Narayana Raju,

Secretary, APMC, Kolar

‘There is no effective pesticide available to prevent pinworm attack’

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