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Impact of spray application methodology on the development of resistance to cypermethrin and spinosad by fall armyworm Spodoptera frugiperda (JE Smith)
Author(s) -
AlSarar Ali,
Hall Franklin R,
Downer Roger A
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
pest management science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.296
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1526-4998
pISSN - 1526-498X
DOI - 10.1002/ps.1241
Subject(s) - spinosad , cypermethrin , biology , larva , toxicology , fall armyworm , instar , pest analysis , noctuidae , bioassay , spodoptera , horticulture , botany , pesticide , agronomy , ecology , gene , recombinant dna , biochemistry
The development of resistance to an insecticide under various types of application method has yet to be reported in the literature. Five fall armyworm Spodoptera armigera (JE Smith) colonies were reared in a chamber for ten generations before starting topical application bioassays. From each colony, 200–500 third–fourth‐instar larvae were fed for 72 h on corn plants sprayed with cypermethrin or spinosad at minimum application rate (20 g ha −1 ) using a small droplet size nozzle XR8001VS (volume median diameter D v0.5 = 163 µm) or a large droplet size nozzle XR8008VS ( D v0.5 = 519 µm). Surviving larvae were transferred to untreated corn leaves to complete their life cycle. Next‐generation third‐instar larvae of each colony were topically dosed with technical cypermethrin or spinosad at 1 µL per larva, and mortality was recorded 24 h post‐treatment. The results indicated that cypermethrin demonstrated an insecticidal activity greater than that of spinosad, and the cypermethrin regression lines moved to the right faster than those for spinosad, indicating an increased tolerance of cypermethrin. Generally, larvae from all generations (F1–F7) under the XR8008VS treatments were less susceptible to cypermethrin and developed resistance faster and to higher levels than larvae from the XR8001VS treatments. The confidence limits (95%) of LD 50 for all spinosad treatments indicated that there was no significant difference from the LD 50 value of the susceptible reference strain. The results are a first indication that application technology/insecticide reaction may affect the rapidity of resistance development in certain pest/plant scenarios, but field studies are needed to confirm this conclusion. Copyright © 2006 Society of Chemical Industry