AI Article Synopsis

  • Insecticide resistance in German cockroaches poses challenges for control programs, leading to a study on the mechanisms behind resistance to bendiocarb and carbaryl, utilizing piperonyl butoxide (PBO) as a synergist.
  • Bioassays tested various concentrations of the insecticides on susceptible and wild strains, determining resistance ratios and the effectiveness of PBO in enhancing susceptibility.
  • Results indicated that wild strains had varying resistance levels, with PBO significantly increasing the toxicity of bendiocarb but not showing a substantial effect on carbaryl resistance, highlighting the role of monooxygenase enzymes in bendiocarb resistance.

Article Abstract

Background: Insecticide resistance is one of the serious problems for German cockroach control program. This study was conducted to determine the bendiocarb and Carbaryl resistance mechanisms in German cockroaches using the piperonyl butoxide (PBO).

Methods: Bioassay tests were conducted with 4 to 6 different concentrations of both insecticides with four replicates of 10 susceptible strain cockroaches per concentration to determine of discriminative concentration. After determining discriminative concentration, the result was compared to wild strain. The levels of susceptibility and resistance ratio (RR) and synergism ratio (SR) were calculated for each five wild strains. Moreover resistance mechanisms in wild strains were determined using PBO synergist in vivo.

Results: Hospital strains showed different levels of resistance to bendiocarb and carbaryl compared to susceptible strain. The bendiocarb and carbaryl resistance ratios ranged from 2.11 to 7.97 and 1.67 to 2 at LD50 levels, respectively. The synergist PBO significantly enhanced the toxicity of bendiocarb and carbaryl to all strains with different degrees of synergist ratio, 1.31, 1.39, 3.61, 1.78, 1.62 and 2.1 fold for bendiocarb, 1.19, 1.18, 1.12. 1.29, 1.45 and 1.11-fold for carbaryl, suggesting monooxygenase involvement in bendiocarb and carbaryl resistance.

Conclusion: The synergetic effect of PBO had the highest effect on bendiocarb and resistance level was significantly reduced, which indicates the important role of monoxidase enzyme in creating resistance to Bendiocarb. Piperonyl butoxide did not have a significant synergistic effect on carbaryl and did not significantly break the resistance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4906746PMC

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