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Fitness comparison of on original and marginal hosts using age-stage, two-sex life tables. | LitMetric

The diamondback moth, , is an important agricultural pest that severely damages cruciferous vegetables. Although previously considered a threat only to species, has been observed to feed on noncruciferous vegetables. Here, we established a population of on the pea (PxP population). We compared this PxP population's performance on the pea host plant to a population (PxR) reared on the original host plant radish () for several generations using an age-stage, two-sex life table and analyzed the correlations between different fitness parameters. In the 1st generation of the PxP population, survival rate of immature stage was 17%, while the survival rate of PxR was 68%; the duration of the 4th larval instar (5.30 d) and mortality (25%) of this generation were significantly longer (2.8 d) and higher (1%) than that of PxR, respectively (both  < .001). Upon long-term acclimation, the PxP fitness improved significantly, especially that the survival rate of immature stages increased to approximately 60% in the 15th, 30th, and 45th generations. However, PxP feeding on pea exhibited poorer fitness with longer larval developmental time, shorter total life span, lighter pupa, and lower fecundity in different generations compared with PxP feeding on radish. PxP feeding on pea also showed a significantly lower intrinsic rate of increase (), net reproduction rate ( ), finite increase rate (), and longer mean generation time () than PxP feeding on radish in all generations tested. Significant positive correlations were observed between pupal weight and female fecundity in pea-fed populations, and between female longevity and female fecundity in pea-fed and radish-fed populations. Our findings suggest that adaptation to pea does not improve overall fitness compared with the original host radish, making pea a marginal host for .

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8293716PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7804DOI Listing

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