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How active ingredient localisation in plant tissues determines the targeted pest spectrum of different chemistries
Author(s) -
Buchholz Anke,
Trapp Stefan
Publication year - 2016
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.4070
Subject(s) - biology , tetranychus urticae , apoplast , phloem , pesticide , botany , xylem , myzus persicae , imidacloprid , pest analysis , cuticle (hair) , horticulture , agronomy , aphid , cell wall , genetics
Abstract BACKGROUND The efficacies of four commercial insecticides and of two research compounds were tested against aphids ( Aphis craccivora and Myzus persicae ), whiteflies ( Bemisia tabaci ) and red‐spotted spider mites ( Tetranychus urticae ) in intrinsic (oral administration), curative (direct contact spray) and translaminar (arthropods infested on untreated leaf underside) assays. With a new translaminar model, the transport across the leaf cuticle and tissues and the electrochemical distribution of test compounds in cellular compartments and apoplast were calculated. RESULTS The comparison of both information sets revealed that the intracellular localisation of active ingredients determines the performance of test compounds against different target pests because of different feeding behaviours: mites feed on mesophyll, and aphids and whiteflies mostly in the vascular system. Polar compounds have a slow adsorption into leaf cells and thus a favourable distribution into apoplast and xylem sap. Slightly lipophilic bases get trapped in vacuoles, which is a less suited place to control hemipteran pests but appropriate to control mites. Non‐favourable cellular localisation led to a strong reduction in translaminar efficacy against phloem feeders. CONCLUSION Prediction and optimisation of intracellular localisation of pesticides add valuable new information for targeted bioavailability and can indicate directions for improved pesticide design. © 2015 Society of Chemical Industry