4.5 Article

Multi-generational Effects of Different Resistant Wheat Varieties on Fitness of Sitobion avenae (Hemiptera: Aphididae)

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECT SCIENCE
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jisesa/ieab077

Keywords

life-history trait; resistance; multi-generational effects; fitness

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The study demonstrated that wheat varieties Ww2730 and Xiaoyan22 showed greater resistance to Sitobion avenae compared to Batis, regardless of the aphids being newly introduced or acclimated. However, the effect of resistance on aphid life-history traits was time dependent, with differences observed in weight gain, development time, fecundity, and net reproduction rates. Despite improvements in individual life-history parameters, reproductive fitness decreased over time.
Crop resistance plays a role in preventing aphid damage, benefiting food production industries, but its effects are limited due to aphid adaptation and phenotypic plasticity. Therefore, furthering understanding of aphid-crop interactions will improve our ability to protect crops from aphids. To determine how aphids adapt to resistant varieties of wheat, Triticum aestivum L. over time, we performed a laboratory experiment to assess the multigenerational effects of three wheat varieties, Batis, Ww2730, and Xiaoyan22, with different resistance levels on the fitness of Sitobion avenae (Fab.) (Hemiptera: Aphididae).The results showed that Ww2730 and Xiaoyan22 were more resistant than Batis to S. avenae, regardless of whether the aphids were newly introduced or had been acclimated before being introduced to the three wheat varieties. However, the effect of resistance on aphid life-history traits was time dependent. Aphid weigh gain increased and they development faster of the acclimated generation compared to the newly introduced generation on all three varieties. And the fecundity on the three varieties and net reproduction rates on Batis and Xiaoyan22 significantly decreased. Aphid fitness in terms of individual life-history parameters improved, whereas aphid fitness in terms of reproductive decreased, and a convergence effect, the difference gaps and standard errors of all life-history traits among the three acclimated populations had narrowed and were less than those in the three first-generation populations, was observed during the 3-mo experimental period. We suggested that S. avenae could rapidly respond to wheat resistance through life-history plasticity.

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