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12 December 2024 Determination of the Relationship Between the Numbers of Linepithema humile (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) on Irrigation Pipes and Tree Trunks to Facilitate Automated Monitoring in Southern California Citrus Orchards
Lin Cong, Ivan Milosavljević, Yehua Li, Weixin Yao, Mark S. Hoddle
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Abstract

Argentine ant, Linepithema humile (Mayr) (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), is a pest in southern California citrus orchards because it protects honeydew-producing hemipteran pests from natural enemies. A major impediment to controlling L. humile is estimating ant densities in orchards. Ants use irrigation lines to travel across orchard floors to reach trees infested with hemipterans. However, for making ant control decisions, it is the number of ants in trees, not on pipes that is critical. Work completed here demonstrates that the number of ants counted on pipes is highly correlated with the number of ants counted on trunks. Densities of ants counted on trunks are correlated with trunk diameter, citrus variety, and time of year and time of day counts. Six regression models, linear regression, zero-inflated Poisson regression, and zero-inflated negative binomial regression models, and each of their mixed model extensions, indicated a strong positive relationship between ant counts on irrigation pipes and ant counts on tree trunks. Mean squared prediction error and 5-fold cross-validation analyses indicated that the best performing of these 6 models was the zero-inflated Poisson mixed regression model. A binary classification model developed using support vector machine learning for ant infestation severity levels, categorized as low (<100 ants counted in 1 min) or high (≥100 ants counted in minutes), predicted ant densities on trunks with 85% accuracy. These models can be used to estimate the number of ants on the trunks of citrus trees by using counts of ants made on irrigation pipes.

Graphical Abstract

(A) Argentine ants using a polyethylene irrigation pipe as a ‘highway’ to move across the floor of a commercial citrus orchard. (B) A trail of Argentine ants forming a column on the trunk of a citrus tree. (C) An infra-red sensor, attached to a polyethylene irrigation pipe, automates counts of ants on irrigation pipes.

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Lin Cong, Ivan Milosavljević, Yehua Li, Weixin Yao, and Mark S. Hoddle "Determination of the Relationship Between the Numbers of Linepithema humile (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) on Irrigation Pipes and Tree Trunks to Facilitate Automated Monitoring in Southern California Citrus Orchards," Journal of Economic Entomology 118(1), 430-440, (12 December 2024). https://doi.org/10.1093/jee/toae279
Received: 19 September 2024; Accepted: 22 November 2024; Published: 12 December 2024
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
binary classification
cross-validation
machine learning
mean squared prediction error
regression analyses
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