RT article T1 Integrated pest management of Tuta absoluta: practical implementations across different world regions A1 Desneux, Nicolas A1 Han, Peng A1 Mansour, Ramzi A1 Arnó, Judit A1 Brévault, Thierry A1 Campos, Mateus R. A1 Chailleux, Anais A1 Guedes, Raul N. C. A1 Karimi, Javad A1 Konan, Kouassi Arthur J. A1 Lavoir, Anne-Violette A1 Luna, Maria G. A1 Pérez-Hedo, Mertixell A1 Urbaneja, Alberto A1 Verheggen, François J. A1 Zappala, Lucia A1 Abbes, Khaled A1 Ali, Abid A1 Bayram, Yunus A1 Cantor, Fernando A1 Cuthbertson, Andrew G. S. A1 De-Vis, Raf A1 Erler, Fedai A1 Firake, Dnyaneshwar M. A1 Haddi, Khalid A1 Hajjar, M. Jamal A1 Ismoilov, Khasan A1 Jaworski, Coline C. A1 Kenis, Marc A1 Liu, Hao-Tian A1 Madadi, Hossein A1 Martin, Thibaud A1 Mazih, Ahmed A1 Messelink, Gerben A1 Mohamed, Samira A. A1 Nofemela, Robert S. A1 Oke, Abiola A1 Ramos, César A1 Ricupero, Michele A1 Roditakis, Emmanouil A1 Shashank, Pathour R. A1 Wan, Fang-Hao A1 Wang, Ming-Hui A1 Wang, Su A1 Zhang, Yi-Bo A1 Biondi, Antonio K1 Invasive alien species K1 Plant resistance K1 Tuta absoluta K1 Agronomic control-related research K1 Resistant cultivars K1 Soil fertilization K1 Irrigation K1 Mass trapping K1 Predatory mirid bugs K1 H20 Plant diseases K1 U40 Surveying methods K1 F07 Soil cultivation K1 F04 Fertilizing K1 F06 Irrigation K1 P01 Nature conservation and land resources K1 Chemical control K1 Biological control K1 Pheromones K1 Integrated pest management K1 Essential oils K1 Botanical insecticides K1 Traps K1 Microbial pesticides K1 Entomopathogenic fungi K1 Entomopathogenic nematodes K1 Parasitoids AB The South American tomato pinworm, Tuta absoluta (Meyrick) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae), has invaded most Afro-Eurasian countries and is threatening worldwide tomato production. Various strategies have been developed and implemented to manage this pest. Here, we present a timely review on the up-to-date development and practical implementation of integrated pest management (IPM) programs for tomato crops across different world regions infested by T. absoluta. While insecticide resistance is a growing concern, biological control via releasing or conserving arthropod natural enemies and sex pheromone-based biotechnical control are the most successful management practices. Agronomic control-related research is an emerging area where the soil fertilization and/or irrigation, as well as breeding of resistant cultivars, has the potential to enhance IPM effectiveness. Grower survey responses in the native areas (i.e., South America), early-invaded areas (i.e., first report between 2006 and 2012) and newly invaded areas (i.e., first report after 2012) showed that the control programs evolved along with the areas and time since invasion. Growers in the early-invaded areas shifted more rapidly from chemical control to biological control compared to those from the native area. In all concerned regions, the pest control failure risk following chemical insecticide applications and the high cost associated with either biological or biotechnical control methods have been the greatest concerns for growers. The information gathered from the native and/or early-invaded areas may help achieve a more effective management in newly invaded areas. Lastly, researchers are expected to break the bottlenecks of some key issues that would enable lowering application cost of novel biorational alternative management options. PB Springer SN 1612-4758 (print-ISSN) YR 2022 FD 2022 LK http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8189 UL http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11939/8189 LA en NO Desneux, N., Han, P., Mansour, R., Arnó, J., Brévault, T., Campos, M. R. et al. (2022). Integrated pest management of Tuta absoluta: practical implementations across different world regions. Journal of Pest Science, 95, 17-39. DS MINDS@UW RD Sep 26, 2023