Journal
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jee/toad134
Keywords
stored-product insect; parasitoid; life table; paralysis rate; quality
Categories
Ask authors/readers for more resources
This study evaluated the effects of cold storage after acclimation on the fitness of H. hebetor. The results showed that cold storage had no significant effect on the offspring fitness. It is recommended to use unrefrigerated males or to avoid simultaneous cold storage of males and females for effective pest control.
Habrobracon hebetor (Say) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) is a cosmopolitan, idiobiont, and gregarious ectoparasitoid, which can parasitize the larvae of several pyralid and noctuid moths. However, adult parasitoids require cold storage to ensure that adequate individuals are available when a pest outbreak occurs. To understand the effects of cold storage after acclimation on offspring fitness of H. hebetor, the development, fecundity, population parameters, and paralysis rate of the F-1 generation were evaluated using an age-stage, two-sex life table. Four pairing treatments were used in this study, with refrigerated males and females (ReFxReM), unrefrigerated females and refrigerated males (UnFxReM), refrigerated females and unrefrigerated males (ReFxUnM), and unrefrigerated females and males (UnFxUnM, control). Cold storage after acclimation had no significant effect on the fecundity or oviposition period of F-0-generation H. hebetor. Moreover, the survival rate (S-a = 61.43%), proportion of females (N-f/N = 0.41), intrinsic rate of increase (r = 0.3450), finite rate of increase (& lambda; = 1.4121), net reproduction rate (R-0 = 149.47), and net paralysis rate (C-0 = 74.52) of ReFxUnM and UnFxUnM (S-a = 50.00%, N-f/N = 0.34, r = 0.3297, & lambda; = 1.3881, R-0 = 155.69, C-0 = 62.90, respectively) treatments were significantly higher than those of the ReFxReM treatment (S-a = 45%, N-f/N = 0.16, r = 0.2277, & lambda; = 1.2558, R-0 = 68.81, C-0 = 31.61, respectively) (except for the S-a of UnFxUnM treatment), and there was no significant difference between the 2 treatments. Overall, it is advisable to avoid simultaneous cold storage of female and male parasitoids or to add unrefrigerated males appropriately when using cold-stored parasitoids to control pests.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available