Sex-determined differential mortality of milkweed bugs, Oncopeltus fasciatus (hemiptera), to aflatoxins |
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Authors: | Joyce Q. Gaston Gerald C. Llewellyn |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23284 USA |
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Abstract: | Studies on the aflatoxins, toxic metabolites of Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus, have involved test systems ranging from cell cultures to laboratory animals. This work reports on the differential response by sex of Oncopeltus fasciatus to aflatoxin B1 (AFB1). Young adult milkweed bugs were chosen randomly from our stock colony and housed in glass culture jars. Triplicate sets of experimental animals were fed 5 μg/ml of AFB1 in their liquid diet. The first death for the experimental females occurred at day 4, and at 10 days for the experimental males. A 50% lethality level for experimental females developed by day 8. Males subjected to the same concentration achieved a 50% lethality level at day 24. For the females the LD50 occurred after consuming 0.49 μg/ml of AFB1. The results indicate that adult female milkweed bugs were hypersensitive to AFB1 as compared to adult males. This organism is more sensitive than the American cockroach and less sensitive than the fruitfly, housefly, and honeybee to toxic aflatoxicosis. Even the female is not sufficiently sensitive to rate highly as a bioassay organism for AFB1. The extreme difference in mortality between the sexes is significant, unusual, and unexplained. |
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Keywords: | mycotoxin aflatoxin Aspergillus parasiticus milkweed bugs |
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