4.5 Article

Phosphine resistance in Sitophilus oryzae (L.) from eastern Australia: Inheritance, fitness and prevalence

Journal

JOURNAL OF STORED PRODUCTS RESEARCH
Volume 59, Issue -, Pages 237-244

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jspr.2014.03.007

Keywords

Fumigation; Inheritance; Fitness; Resistance screening; Stored grain pests

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research
  2. Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centres Program

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The inheritance and fitness of phosphine resistance was investigated in an Australian strain of the rice weevil, Sitophilus maze (L.), as well as its prevalence in eastern Australia. This type of knowledge may provide insights in to the development of phosphine resistance in this species with the potential for better management. This strain was 12.2 x resistant at the LC50 level based on results for adults exposed for 20 h. Data from the testing of F-1 adults from the reciprocal crosses (R-female x S-male and S-female x R-male) showed that resistance was autosomal and inherited as an incompletely recessive trait with a degree of dominance of -0.88. The dose-response data for the F-1 x S and F-1 x R test crosses, and the F-2 progeny were compared with predicted dose-response assuming monogenic recessive inheritance, and the results were consistent with resistance being conferred by one major gene. There was no evidence of fitness cost based on the frequency of susceptible phenotypes in hybridized populations that were reared for seven generations without exposure to phosphine. Lack of fitness cost suggests that resistant alleles will tend to persist in field populations that have undergone selection even if selection pressure is removed. Discriminating dose tests on 107 population samples collected from farms from 2006 to 2010 show that populations containing insects with the weak resistant phenotype are common in eastern Australia, although the frequency of resistant phenotypes within samples was typically low. The prevalence of resistance is a warning that this species has been subject to considerable selection pressure and that effective resistance management practices are needed to address this problem. Crown Copyright (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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