You need JavaScript to view this

Generic phytosanitary irradiation treatments

Abstract

The history of the development of generic phytosanitary irradiation (PI) treatments is discussed beginning with its initial proposal in 1986. Generic PI treatments in use today are 150 Gy for all hosts of Tephritidae, 250 Gy for all arthropods on mango and papaya shipped from Australia to New Zealand, 300 Gy for all arthropods on mango shipped from Australia to Malaysia, 350 Gy for all arthropods on lychee shipped from Australia to New Zealand and 400 Gy for all hosts of insects other than pupae and adult Lepidoptera shipped to the United States. Efforts to develop additional generic PI treatments and reduce the dose for the 400 Gy treatment are ongoing with a broad based 5-year, 12-nation cooperative research project coordinated by the joint Food and Agricultural Organization/International Atomic Energy Agency Program on Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture. Key groups identified for further development of generic PI treatments are Lepidoptera (eggs and larvae), mealybugs and scale insects. A dose of 250 Gy may suffice for these three groups plus others, such as thrips, weevils and whiteflies. (author)
Authors:
Hallman, Guy J [1] 
  1. United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Weslaco, TX (United States)
Publication Date:
Jan 15, 2013
Product Type:
Miscellaneous
Report Number:
INIS-XA-13R0012
Resource Relation:
Other Information: The full paper was published in: Radiation Physics and Chemistry (2012) 81: 861-866; Related Information: In: Insect Pest Control Newsletter, No. 80, January 2013| 44 p.
Subject:
60 APPLIED LIFE SCIENCES; AGRICULTURE; BEETLES; EGGS; IAEA; INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION; LARVAE; LEPIDOPTERA; PAPAYAS; PEST CONTROL; PUPAE; RADAPPERTIZATION; RADIATION DOSES; RADIODISINFESTATION
OSTI ID:
22072851
Research Organizations:
Joint FAO/IAEA Division of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture, Vienna (Austria); FAO/IAEA Agriculture and Biotechnology Laboratory, Seibersdorf (Austria)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISSN 1011-274X; TRN: XA13R0014032592
Availability:
Available from INIS in electronic form. Also available on-line: http://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/Publications/PDF/Newsletters/IPC-NL-80.pdf; Web sites: http://www-naweb.iaea.org/nafa/ipc/index.html; http://www.fao.org/ag/portal/age-index.html
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 33
Announcement Date:
Mar 14, 2013

Citation Formats

Hallman, Guy J. Generic phytosanitary irradiation treatments. IAEA: N. p., 2013. Web.
Hallman, Guy J. Generic phytosanitary irradiation treatments. IAEA.
Hallman, Guy J. 2013. "Generic phytosanitary irradiation treatments." IAEA.
@misc{etde_22072851,
title = {Generic phytosanitary irradiation treatments}
author = {Hallman, Guy J}
abstractNote = {The history of the development of generic phytosanitary irradiation (PI) treatments is discussed beginning with its initial proposal in 1986. Generic PI treatments in use today are 150 Gy for all hosts of Tephritidae, 250 Gy for all arthropods on mango and papaya shipped from Australia to New Zealand, 300 Gy for all arthropods on mango shipped from Australia to Malaysia, 350 Gy for all arthropods on lychee shipped from Australia to New Zealand and 400 Gy for all hosts of insects other than pupae and adult Lepidoptera shipped to the United States. Efforts to develop additional generic PI treatments and reduce the dose for the 400 Gy treatment are ongoing with a broad based 5-year, 12-nation cooperative research project coordinated by the joint Food and Agricultural Organization/International Atomic Energy Agency Program on Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture. Key groups identified for further development of generic PI treatments are Lepidoptera (eggs and larvae), mealybugs and scale insects. A dose of 250 Gy may suffice for these three groups plus others, such as thrips, weevils and whiteflies. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {2013}
month = {Jan}
}