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March 25, 2025

Adding silicon to soil can help tomato plants fight South American tomato pinworm

ffects of mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSN) supplementation and oviposition by TPW on tomato plants. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2427314122
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ffects of mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSN) supplementation and oviposition by TPW on tomato plants. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2427314122

A team of entomologists and botanists at the International Center of Insect 糖心视频iology and Ecology in Nairobi and the University of Pretoria has found that adding silicon to soil can help tomato plants fight off the destructive South American tomato pinworm. The study is in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The South American tomato pinworm is the larva of Tuta absoluta, a species of moth. Over the past several decades, the has migrated to North America, Europe and Africa, and in the process, its larvae have become a major pest, responsible for destroying billions of dollars' worth of crops every year. The pests have become resistant to most of the chemicals developed to kill them, and efforts have arisen around the globe to find an effective solution. In this new effort, the research team tested the possibility of adding to the .

Botanists have long known that adding silicon to soil can help some plants resist certain pests. That led the researchers on this new effort to test whether the chemical element might help tomatoes fight off pinworms. They added different amounts of silicon to soil samples used to grow tomato plants and exposed them to moths.

The researchers found that adding silicon to the soil caused the plants to produce a dark goo at the base of the tiny hairs on their stems. They then found that the moths appeared to prefer laying their eggs on the goo rather than the leaves of the plant.

When the pinworms hatched, they consumed the goo, which lacked adequate nutrients to keep them alive, and they died of starvation. They also found that the goo caused changes to the microbiome of the pinworms, leading to changes in their excrement that emitted gases attracting insects that feed on pinworms.

The research team acknowledges that their work is just an initial step in using silicon to protect and hope further testing will confirm its effectiveness.

More information: Kokou R. Fiaboe et al, Nanosilica supplementation in tomato increases oviposition on stems and caterpillar mortality in the tomato pinworm, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025).

Journal information: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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Adding silicon to soil can help tomato plants combat the South American tomato pinworm, Tuta absoluta. Silicon induces the production of a dark goo on tomato plant stems, which attracts moths to lay eggs there instead of on the leaves. The hatched pinworms consume the nutrient-deficient goo and die of starvation. Additionally, the goo alters the pinworms' microbiome, producing gases that attract predatory insects. This approach offers a potential non-chemical pest control method.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.