Wing development and parthenogenesis induced in progenies of kinoprene-treated gynoparae of Aphis fabae and Myzus persicae |
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Authors: | T.E. Mittler S.G. Nassar G.B. Staal |
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Affiliation: | 1. Division of Entomology, University of California, Berkeley, California, U.S.A.;2. Zoecon Corporation, Palo Alto, California, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Presumptive gynoparae of Aphis fabae and Myzus persicae were exposed to various levels of kinoprene (Zoecon's ZR 777) by being placed as 4th-instar alatiform larvae on bean or radish seedlings that had been sprayed with different concentrations of kinoprene in an acetone-tween-water emulsion. Larvae exposed to the highest (0.1%) concentration tested developed into adults 1 to 2 days sooner than those on control plants. The adults on the treated plants had variously deformed wings, reduced sclerotization (and pigmentation in the case of M. persicae) and other apteriform features. On reaching adulthood the affected aphids settled to feed and started to larviposit some days earlier than the control aphids. After two weeks as adults, treated gynoparae of M. persicae produced more larvae than the 7 to 9 typically deposited by control gynoparae under the short-day and cool temperature conditions employed in these tests.Whereas most or all of the larvae produced by the control gynoparae developed into oviparae (apterous, egg-laying, sexual females), gynoparae exposed to 0.1% kinoprene-treated plants predominantly produced alatiform viviparous offspring. If the latter were allowed to develop on untreated plants they deposited a few oviparous larvae. Alatiform virginoparae of M. persicae (from the same holocyclic strain that produced the gynoparae) also responded to kinoprene by developing wing deformities and by producing alatiform offspring. In contrast, alatiform virginoparae from an androcyclic strain of M. persicae, although developing wing deformities, produced only apterous progeny.The stimulation by kinoprene of wing development and parthenogenesis in the progeny of treated gynoparae is discussed in the light of our present knowledge of these aspects of aphid polymorphism. |
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