Metabolic mechanisms only partially explain resistance to pyrethroids in Australian broiler house populations of lesser mealworm (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae).

J Econ Entomol

Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation, Agri-Science Queensland, 665 Fairfield Rd., Yeerongpilly, QLD 4105, Australia.

Published: April 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the susceptibility of six Australian broiler house populations of the lesser mealworm to various insecticides, revealing strong resistance to cyfluthrin in five populations, while one population showed equivalent susceptibility to beta-cyfluthrin and gamma-cyhalothrin.
  • Resistance ratios for cyfluthrin ranged from 19-37-fold among resistant populations, with varying degrees of reduced susceptibility to other pyrethroids compared to the insecticide-susceptible population.
  • Adding piperonyl butoxide (PBO) increased the susceptibility of the resistant populations to some pyrethroids, but the effects were inconsistent, suggesting the presence of multiple resistance mechanisms beyond just metabolic resistance.

Article Abstract

The susceptibility of six Australian broiler house populations and an insecticide susceptible population of lesser mealworm, Alphitobius diaperinus (Panzer) (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae), to cyfluthrin, beta-cyfluthrin, gamma-cyhalothrin, and deltamethrin was investigated. One broiler house population had equivalent susceptibility to the susceptible to beta-cyfluthrin and beta-cyhalothrin, with higher susceptibility to cyfluthrin and deltamethrin. The remaining five populations demonstrated strong resistance to cyfluthrin (19-37-fold), the insecticide used most widely for management of A. diaperinus in Australia. Each cyfluthrin-resistant population demonstrated reduced susceptibility to beta-cyfluthrin (resistance ratios were 8-17-fold), deltamethrin (2.5-8-fold), and gamma-cyhalothrin (6-12-fold) compared with the laboratory population, but cross-resistance patterns varied considerably between populations. Adding piperonyl butoxide (PBO) had no effect on the susceptibility of the susceptible population to any of the insecticides, but it increased the susceptibility of each of the five cyfluthrin-resistant populations: to cyfluthrin (synergism ratio range, 1.9-5.0-fold), beta-cyfluthrin (1.6-4.1-fold), and y-cyhalothrin (1.7-2.0-fold). PBO had a more variable effect on susceptibility to deltamethrin, with three of the cyfluthrin-resistant populations being more susceptible to deltamethrin in the presence of PBO, but susceptibility of the remaining two populations was unaffected by adding PBO (synergism ratio range, 0.9-2.5-fold). Overall, the addition of PBO to the four pyrethroids had variable effects on their susceptibility. This variability indicated the presence of other resistance mechanisms in beetle populations apart from metabolic resistance. In addition, the relative importance of metabolic resistance in each beetle population varied widely between pyrethroids. Thus, it cannot be assumed that PBO will reliably synergize pyrethroids against cyfluthrin-resistant lesser mealworm populations when using it to mitigate insecticide resistance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/ec10377DOI Listing

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