Agriculture (Jul 2022)
Alternately Rearing with Susceptible Variety Can Delay the Virulence Development of Insect Pests to Resistant Varieties
Abstract
Resistant crop varieties can usually decrease the population density of insect pests; however, they can also easily cause the occurrence of highly virulent pest populations when repeatedly grown. Whether herbivorous insects feeding intermittently on a susceptible variety affects their subsequent virulence has rarely been investigated. In this paper, we examined the variations in the virulence of the brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens (Stål) (Hemiptera: Delphacidae), by alternately rearing three resistant rice varieties, Mudgo, ASD7, and Rathu Heenati, with a susceptible rice variety (TN1) in indoor experiments. The results showed that, while the susceptible rice variety was used in alternate rearing for several generations, the BPHs exhibited a higher intrinsic rate of increase (rm) and were identified as less virulent to all three resistant varieties. Such virulence reduction by experience with a susceptible variety could delay the progression of resistance-breaking toward resistant varieties. The results suggested that careful alternation with susceptible varieties in fields is a potential method for pest variety-resistance management.
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