Insects (Mar 2022)

Use of Age-Stage, Two-Sex Life Table to Compare the Fitness of <i>Bactrocera dorsalis</i> (Diptera: Tephritidae) on Northern and Southern Host Fruits in China

  • Yanfei Zhu,
  • Fangjian Qi,
  • Xiumei Tan,
  • Tong Zhang,
  • Ziwen Teng,
  • Yinjun Fan,
  • Fanghao Wan,
  • Hongxu Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13030258
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 258

Abstract

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Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel), as a quarantine pest in many countries and regions, has shown a trend of northward diffusion in the past century in China. In order to determine whether B. dorsalis will cause great harm to the dominant northern fruits, the age-stage two-sex life tables of peaches and apples were constructed, with oranges as the control. The results showed that the developmental rate, intrinsic rate of increase (r), and finite rate of increase (λ) on oranges and peaches were significantly greater than on apples. Additionally, the prediction of population growth 90 days after oviposition revealed that the whole population on oranges and peaches increased by 13,667.3 and 12,112.1 times, respectively, indicating that B. dorsalis is very likely to endanger peach orchards. The population increased on apples by 4311 times, though this is lower than that on oranges and peaches. Overall, peaches with high fitness similar to oranges are very suitable as a host for B. dorsalis and are likely to become a new favorable host, while apples may also become a potentially new host, though with lower fitness. Therefore, the most pressing solutions to take are population monitoring, comprehensive prevention, and control in the case of any potential large-scale outbreak of B. dorsalis in northern China.

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