4.7 Review

AC-DC electropenetrography: fundamentals, controversies, and perspectives for arthropod pest management

Journal

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 77, Issue 3, Pages 1132-1149

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/ps.6087

Keywords

arthropod‐ substrate interactions; electronic monitoring; electrical penetration graph; feeding behavior; egg‐ laying behavior; pathogen transmission; pesticides; host plant resistance

Funding

  1. CAPES Foundation [001]
  2. CNPq
  3. USDA-ARS [2034-22000-010-00D]

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The article discusses the importance and challenges of studying the association between arthropods and their physical substrate, as well as the expanding applications of electropenetrography (EPG) in pest management and understanding pest behavior. EPG technology can help explain mechanisms of crop damage caused by pests and guide control measures.
Studying the intimate association of arthropods with their physical substrate is both important and challenging. It is important because substrate is a key determinant for organism fitness; challenging because the intricacies of this association are dynamic, and difficult to record and resolve. The advent of electropenetrography (EPG) and subsequent developments allowed researchers to overcome this challenge. Nonetheless, EPG research has been historically restricted to piercing-sucking hemipteran plant pests. Recently, its potential use has been greatly broadened for additional pests with instrument advances. Thus, blood-feeding arthropods and chewing feeders, as well as non-feeding behaviors like oviposition by both pests and parasitoids, are novel new targets for EPG research, with critical consequences for integrated pest management. EPG can explain mechanisms of crop damage, plant or animal pathogen transmission, and the effects of insecticides, antifeedants, repellents, or transgenic plants and animals, on specific behaviors of damage or transmission. This review broadly covers the principles and development of EPG technology, emphasizing controversies and challenges remaining with suggested research to overcome them. In addition, it summarizes 60+ years of basic and applied EPG research, and previews future directions for pest management. The goal is to stimulate new applications for this unique enabling technology. Published 2020. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

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