Section 6. Pyrethroid resistance: field selection in sorghum

1993 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 43-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil W. Forrester ◽  
Matthew Cahill ◽  
Lisa J. Bird ◽  
Jacquelyn K. Layland

SummaryPyrethroids applied to flowering sorghum, at either the low midge rate or the higher Helicoverpa rate (20 g and 100 g fenvalerate a.i./ha, respectively), caused selective mortality of Helicoverpa armigera larvae and resulted in differential selection for resistance. This finding vindicated the original strategy decision to apply the same temporal restrictions on pyrethroid use for sorghum midge, Contarinia sorghicola, as those for H. armigera.

1993 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne C. Daly ◽  
Jennifer H. Fisk

AbstractPyrethroid resistance was examined in adult Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) in both laboratory and field selected strains. A series of F1 and backcrosses was made between a susceptible and an isofemale resistant strain. Dose-responses were obtained using contact with a treated surface inside a scintillation vial. Inheritance of resistance was consistent with an incompletely dominant major gene and resistance factors were greater than 100-fold. Piperonyl butoxide synergized the effects of the synthetic pyrethroid, fenvalerate, 1000-fold and eliminated resistance entirely. Field trials examined the mortality of resistant and susceptible adults exposed to commercial application rates of synthetic pyrethroids. Adults were immobilized and placed in cotton fields prior to aerial applications of insecticide. Survival of resistant adults was significantly greater than susceptible ones in both trials. It was concluded that selective mortality in the adult life-stage contributes to the evolution of pyrethroid resistance.


1996 ◽  
Vol 86 (5) ◽  
pp. 499-514 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nigel J. Armes ◽  
Deepak R. Jadhav ◽  
Kenneth R. DeSouza

AbstractHelicoverpa armigera (Hübner) larvae were collected from field crops and wild hosts in India, Nepal and Pakistan from 1991 to 1995, and ninety eight laboratory cultures established. Cypermethrin, fenvalerate, endosulfan, quinalphos, monocrotophos and methomyl insecticides were topically applied to 30–40 mg, first laboratory generation larvae and resistance determined from log dose probit bioassays. Significant levels of cypermethrin and fenvalerate resistance were found in all field strains, demonstrating that resistance to at least some pyrethroids is now ubiquitous in H. armigera populations in the Indian subcontinent; cypermethrin and fenvalerate resistance levels ranged from 5– to 6500–fold and 16– to 3200–fold respectively. Pyrethroid resistance levels were highest in the intensive cotton and pulse growing regions of central and southern India where excessive application of insecticide is common. In all field strains assayed, pre-treatment with the metabolic synergist piperonyl butoxide (pbo), resulted in significant suppression of pyrethroid resistance. However, in nearly all cases, full suppression of resistance was not achieved. This residual non-pbo-suppressible resistance was most likely due to a nerve-insensitivity resistance mechanism. Pbo-insensitive resistance was highest in regions of India where insecticides were frequently applied to cotton and legume crops. In some regions where insecticides were heavily overused, a second high order nerve-insensitivity mechanism (possibly a Super -Kdr type mechanism), may have been present. Incipient endosulfan resistance (1–28-fold), was present throughout India, Nepal and Pakistan. Low to moderate levels of resistance (2–59–fold), were reported to the phosphorothionate group organophosphate, quinalphos, in India and Pakistan, but there was no evidence of significant resistance (0.4–3–fold), to the phosphate group organophosphate, monocrotophos, under our bioassay conditions between 1993 and 1994. H. armigera strains collected in Nepal in 1993 and 1994 were susceptible to quinalphos, but by 1995, 4–5–fold resistance was detected. It is probable that much of the resistance to pyrethroid, organophosphate and carbamate insecticides in the Indian subcontinent can be attributed to an inherited or inducible mixed function oxidase complex. Non-pbo-suppressible resistance becomes significant in regions and periods in the season when insecticide selection pressure on resistant H. armigera larvae on cotton and legume crops is very high.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 763-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Yang ◽  
Y Wu ◽  
S Chen ◽  
G.J Devine ◽  
I Denholm ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Neil W. Forrester ◽  
Matthew Cahill ◽  
Lisa J. Bird ◽  
Jacquelyn K. Layland

SummaryIn response to field pyrethroid failures against Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) in early 1983, an insecticide resistance management (IRM) strategy was introduced for insect control in summer crops in eastern Australia. The aims of this strategy were to contain the pyrethroid resistance problem, to prevent re-selection of historical endosulfan resistance (both curative IRM) and to avoid any future problems with organophosphate/carbamate resistance (preventative IRM). An alternation strategy was adopted which was based on the rotation of unrelated chemical groups on a per generation basis, along with a strong recommendation for the use of ovicidal mixtures. These chemical countermeasures were then integrated with other non-chemical control methods (biological and cultural) into a workable integrated pest management programme. The restrictions were applied to all Helicoverpa armigera susceptible crops (including cereals, oilseeds, grain legumes, tomatoes, tobacco and cotton) and even to other co-incident pest species. From its inception, compliance with the voluntary strategy has been exceptional.


2012 ◽  
Vol 109 (38) ◽  
pp. 15206-15211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Joußen ◽  
Sara Agnolet ◽  
Sybille Lorenz ◽  
Sebastian E. Schöne ◽  
Renate Ellinger ◽  
...  

Worldwide, increasing numbers of insects have evolved resistance to a wide range of pesticides, which hampers their control in the field and, therefore, threatens agriculture. Members of the carboxylesterase and cytochrome P450 monooxygenase superfamilies are prominent candidates to confer metabolic resistance to pyrethroid insecticides. Both carboxylesterases and P450 enzymes have been shown to be involved in pyrethroid resistance in Australian Helicoverpa armigera, the noctuid species possessing by far the most reported resistance cases worldwide. However, specific enzymes responsible for pyrethroid resistance in field populations of this species have not yet been identified. Here, we show that the resistance toward fenvalerate in an Australian strain of H. armigera is due to a unique P450 enzyme, CYP337B3, which arose from unequal crossing-over between two parental P450 genes, resulting in a chimeric enzyme. CYP337B3 is capable of metabolizing fenvalerate into 4′-hydroxyfenvalerate, which exhibits no toxic effect on susceptible larvae; enzymes from the parental P450 genes showed no detectable fenvalerate metabolism. Furthermore, a polymorphic H. armigera strain could be bred into a susceptible line possessing the parental genes CYP337B1 and CYP337B2 and a resistant line possessing only CYP337B3. The exclusive presence of CYP337B3 in resistant insects of this strain confers a 42-fold resistance to fenvalerate. Thus, in addition to previously documented genetic mechanisms of resistance, recombination can also generate selectively advantageous variants, such as this chimeric P450 enzyme with an altered substrate specificity leading to a potent resistance mechanism.


2002 ◽  
Vol 93 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 55-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis M Torres-Vila ◽  
M.Carmen Rodrı́guez-Molina ◽  
Alfredo Lacasa-Plasencia ◽  
Pablo Bielza-Lino ◽  
Ángel Rodrı́guez-del-Rincón

2008 ◽  
Vol 98 (6) ◽  
pp. 565-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Brévault ◽  
J. Achaleke ◽  
S.P. Sougnabé ◽  
M. Vaissayre

AbstractIn cotton-growing areas of Central Africa, timing of host crops and pest management practices in annual rainfed cropping systems result in a shifting mosaic of habitats that influence the dynamics and resistance of Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) populations on spatial scales, both within and across seasons. From 2002 to 2006, regional and local resistance was monitored among cotton fields and among the major host plants of the bollworm. From 2002, pyrethroid resistance increased within and across cotton-growing seasons to reach a worrying situation at the end of the 2005 growing season. Cotton crops played a fundamental role in the increase in seasonal resistance, even if the intensive use of insecticides on local tomato crops strongly concentrated resistance alleles in residual populations throughout the off-season. Due to the relative stability of resistance in H. armigera populations despite a long off-season, we believe that after the dispersal of the moths southwards at the end of the growing season, reverse migration mainly accounts for the reconstitution of populations at the onset of the following growing season. In addition, local resistance monitoring in 2005 and 2006 showed that it was possible to control the increase in resistance by temporarily stopping the use of pyrethroids during the period of peak infestation of cotton by H. armigera. On the other hand, the similar resistance frequency of populations sampled from sprayed and unsprayed synchronous hosts confirmed the absence of reproductive isolation between adults. As a result, diversity in cropping systems should be encouraged by planting alternative host plants to provide a mosaic of habitats, which in return would provide insecticide-free refuges. The implications for insecticide resistance management in annual cropping systems are discussed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document