Phosphine resistance, respiration rate and fitness consequences in stored-product insects.

Pest Manag Sci

Departamento de Biologia Animal, Universidade Federal de Viçosa, Viçosa, MG 36570-000, Brazil.

Published: September 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Resistance to phosphine fumigants in stored product insects poses significant control challenges, with studies indicating varying resistance levels across multiple populations of Tribolium castaneum, Rhyzopertha dominica, and Oryzaephilus surinamensis from Brazil.
  • Research found a correlation between lower carbon dioxide production (respiration rate) and higher resistance to phosphine, suggesting that resistant insects uptake less fumigant due to their physiology.
  • The study suggests that interrupting phosphine use can potentially restore susceptibility in resistant insect populations, offering a new management strategy for pest control.

Article Abstract

Resistance to fumigants has been frequently reported in insect pests of stored products and is one of the obstacles in controlling these pests. The authors studied phosphine resistance and its physiological basis in adult insects of 12 populations of Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) (Tenebrionidae), ten populations of Rhyzopertha dominica (F.) (Bostrichidae) and eight populations of Oryzaephilus surinamensis L. (Silvanidae) from Brazil, and the possible existence of fitness costs associated with phosphine resistance in the absence of this fumigant. The bioassays for the detection of phosphine resistance followed the FAO standard method. The production of carbon dioxide and the instantaneous rate of population increase (r(i)) of each population of each species were correlated with their resistance ratios at the LC(50). The resistance ratio at LC(50) in T. castaneum ranged from 1.0- to 186.2-fold, in R. dominica from 2.0- to 71.0-fold and in O. surinamensis from 1.9- to 32.2-fold. Ten populations of T. castaneum, nine populations of R. dominica and seven populations of O. surinamensis were resistant to phosphine. In all three species there was significant association (P < 0.05) between respiration rate and phosphine resistance. The populations with lower carbon dioxide production showed a higher resistance ratio, suggesting that the lower respiration rate is the physiological basis of phosphine resistance by reducing the fumigant uptake in the resistant insects. Conversely, populations with higher r(i) showed lower resistance ratios, which could indicate a lower rate of reproduction of the resistant populations compared with susceptible populations. Thus, management strategies based on the interruption of phosphine fumigation may result in reestablishment of susceptibility, and shows good potential for more effective management of phosphine-resistant populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ps.1416DOI Listing

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