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Sublethal effects of malathion on boll weevil (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) fecundity when maintained on cotton squares or artificial diet
Authors:JOHN SCOTT ARMSTRONG  ALLAN T SHOWLER  MAMOUDOU SÉTAMOU  SHOIL GREENBERG
Institution:Beneficial Insects Unit, Kika de la Garza Subtropical Agricultural Research Center, USDA-ARS;and Integrated Farming and Natural Resources Research Unit, Kika de la Garza Subtropical Agricultural Research Center, USDA-ARS;and Texas A &M University Citrus Center, Welascao, Texas, USA
Abstract:Mated 3‐day‐old female boll weevils, Anthonomus grandis grandis Boheman, reared from field‐infested cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) squares were topically treated with an estimated LD50 of malathion (2 μg) to assess its effects on fecundity, oviposition, and body fat condition. Two different food sources, cotton squares and artificial diet, were assessed in malathion‐treated and nontreated (control) weevils. The LD50 caused ~50% mortality in the square‐fed malathion treatment, but the artificial diet‐fed malathion‐treated weevils were less susceptible. LD50 survivors fed on the squares produced ≥ 9 times more chorionated eggs in the ovaries and oviposited ≥ 19‐fold more than survivors fed artificial diet, regardless of the malathion treatment. Boll weevils that survived a 2 μg LD50 malathion and also fed squares were ~4.5‐fold leaner than diet‐fed weevils. Our findings demonstrate that non‐resistant boll weevils surviving a sublethal dose of malathion will reproduce without any delay or significant loss in fecundity, and the food source for which boll weevils are maintained when conducting these assays will directly affect the results. The significance of these findings and how they are related to the final stages of eradicating the boll weevil from the US are discussed.
Keywords:Anthonomus grandis grandis            boll weevil  fecundity  malathion  sublethal
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