Journal of Integrative Agriculture (Jan 2024)
Tissue distribution of cadmium and its effect on reproduction in Spodoptera exigua
Abstract
Vegetable fields are often contaminated by heavy metals, and Spodoptera exigua is a major vegetable pest which is stressed by heavy metals mainly by feeding. In this study, cadmium accumulation in the tissues of S. exigua exposed to cadmium and its effects on the growth and development of the parents and the offspring were investigated. Under the stress of different concentrations of cadmium (0.2, 3.2, and 51.2 mg kg–1), the cadmium content in each tissue of S. exigua increased in a dose-dependent manner. At the larval stage, the highest cadmium accumulation was found in midgut in all three cadmium treatments, but at the adult stage, the highest cadmium content was found in fat body. In addition, the cadmium content in ovaries was much higher than in testes. When F1 S. exigua was stressed by cadmium and the F2 generation was not fed a cadmium-containing diet, the larval survival, pupation rate, emergence rate and fecundity of the F2 generation were significantly reduced in the 51.2 mg kg–1 treatment compared to the corresponding F1 generation. Even in the F2 generation of the 3.2 mg kg–1 treatment, the fecundity was significantly lower than in the parental generation. The fecundity of the only-female stressed treatment was significantly lower than that of the only-male stressed treatment at the 3.2 and 51.2 mg kg–1 cadmium exposure levels. When only mothers were stressed at the larval stage, the fecundity of the F2 generation was significantly lower than that of the F1 generation in the 51.2 mg kg–1 treatment, and it was also significantly lower than in the 3.2 and 0.2 mg kg–1 treatments. The results of our study can provide useful information for forecasting the population increase trends under different heavy metal stress conditions and for the reliable environmental risk assessment of heavy metal pollution.