Evidence of active oviposition avoidance to systemically applied imidacloprid in the Colorado potato beetle

Author:

Edison Alitha12ORCID,Michelbach Anja13,Sowade Dominique1,Kertzel Hanna2,Schmidt Luise1,Schäfer Martin12,Lysander Maximillian2,Nauen Ralf4,Duchen Pablo12,Xu Shuqing2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity University of Münster Hüfferstraße 1 Münster 48149 Germany

2. Institute of Organismic and Molecular Evolution (iomE) University of Mainz Hanns‐Dieter‐Hüsch‐Weg 15 Mainz 55128 Germany

3. Current address: Department of Cell and Tissue Dynamics Münster Germany

4. Crop Science Division Research and Development Department Bayer AG Monheim Germany

Abstract

AbstractAgricultural pests can develop behavioral resistance to insecticides by choosing to feed or oviposit on insecticide‐free hosts. As young larvae have relatively low mobility, oviposition preferences from female adults may play a critical role in shaping the evolutionary trajectory of pest populations. While oviposition avoidance of insecticide‐treated hosts was found in different agriculture pests, it remains unclear whether female adults actively choose to occupy insecticide‐free hosts. To address this question, we investigated feeding and oviposition preferences between imidacloprid‐treated and imidacloprid‐free plants in the Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say, a major potato pest. We performed behavioral choice assays on two strains that differed in both fecundity and insecticide resistance. We found that one strain preferred to feed on the insecticide‐free plants and that this preference is not innate. Meanwhile, the other strain chose plants for feeding and oviposition randomly. Further analyses of the moving patterns of the beetles suggested that the oviposition preference in the first strain is likely due to active learning.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Insect Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Agronomy and Crop Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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