4.6 Article

Gene introgression in assessing fitness costs associated with phosphine resistance in the rusty grain beetle

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEST SCIENCE
Volume 94, Issue 4, Pages 1415-1426

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10340-020-01315-6

Keywords

Biological cost; Developmental time; Reproduction; Suboptimal condition; Low temperature

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centres program [PBCRC3039]
  2. Australian Government's Australia-India strategic research fund, Department of Industry and Science (DIS), Canberra [AISRF 48516]

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This study investigated the fitness cost associated with phosphine resistance in the rusty grain beetle, Cryptolestes ferrugineus. The results showed that strongly phosphine resistant strains did not incur significant fitness costs under suboptimal conditions, which will have implications for pest management strategies.
The current study investigates the fitness cost associated with phosphine resistance in the rusty grain beetle, Cryptolestes ferrugineus (Stephens), a problematic pest in the stored commodities that has developed strong resistance to fumigant phosphine. Three characterised insect strains: the susceptible (Ref-S), the strongly resistant (Ref-R), the introgressed resistant (Intro-R) and a segregating population (F-25) derived from crossing the Ref-S and Ref-R strains were used in this study. Intro-R was developed by introgressing two phosphine resistance genes, cf_rph1 and cf_rph2 into Ref-S, aimed to reduce the influence of background genetic factors. Intro-R exhibited 592 x resistance to phosphine and homozygous for strong resistance allele, cf_rph2 (L73N). Two key fitness cost criteria, developmental time and fecundity, were assessed under optimal and suboptimal conditions (less favourable diet and low temperature). There was no significant difference in developmental time and fecundity between Ref-S and either Intro-R strain or F-25 under optimal conditions. When challenged with a less favourable diet, cracked wheat + cracked sorghum (CW + CS), or exposed to a low temperature (22 degrees C), both Intro-R and Ref-S had similar developmental time and total numbers of F-1 progeny, confirming the absence of significant fitness effects expressed in these conditions. Therefore, we conclude that strongly phosphine resistant C. ferrugineus are unlikely to incur potential fitness costs. This finding will have implications towards developing strategies to manage this pest.

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