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Article
Persistence and inheritance of costs of resistance to imidacloprid in Colorado potato beetle
Journal of Economic Entomology (2007)
  • Mitchell Baker
  • Andrei Alyokhin
  • Adam Porter
  • David Ferro
  • Shana Dastur
  • Nehal Galal
Abstract
Reduced fitness among resistant versus susceptible individuals slows resistance evolution and makes it easier to manage. A loss of resistance costs could indicate novel adaptations or mutations contributing to resistance. We measured costs of resistance to imidacloprid in a Massachusetts resistant population compared with a Massachusetts susceptible population in 1999 in terms of fecundity, hatching success, egg development time, and sprint speed. Resistance was additive and seemed to be polygenic with high heritability. The fecundity cost appeared overdominant in 1999, and the hatch rate cost was partly recessive in 1999, but neither was signiÞcantly different from dominant or recessive. In 2004, we repeated our measures of resistance costs in Massachusetts in terms of fecundity and hatching success, and we added a new resistant population from Maine. In 2005, we compared development time of Maine resistant and the laboratory susceptible colony eggs. Significant fecundity costs of resistance were found in both population in both 1999 and 2004, and significant egg developmental time costs were found in 1999 and 2005. However, the hatching success costs of resistance were significant in 1999 and not apparent in 2004, suggesting some modification or replacement of the resistance genes in the intervening time.
Keywords
  • Leptinotarsa decemlineata,
  • dominance,
  • life history,
  • insecticide resistance management
Disciplines
Publication Date
2007
Citation Information
Mitchell Baker, Andrei Alyokhin, Adam Porter, David Ferro, et al.. "Persistence and inheritance of costs of resistance to imidacloprid in Colorado potato beetle" Journal of Economic Entomology Vol. 100 (2007)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/andrei_alyokhin/7/