Publication | Open Access
Responses of Arkansas Populations of Tarnished Plant Bugs (Heteroptera: Miridae) to Insecticides, and Tolerance Differences Between Nymphs and Adults
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1997
Year
Low Insecticide UseHigher TolerancesInsect ConservationPlant-insect InteractionEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyCrop ProtectionArkansas PopulationsTarnished Plant BugsInsecticide TolerancesPest ControlPest ManagementToxicologyInsecticidePublic HealthPesticide Resistance
Tarnished plant hugs, Lygus lineolaris (Palisot de Beauvois), collected from 4 sites in Arkansas were tested for susceptibility to 4 insecticides (λ-cyhalothrin, dimethoate, edosulfan, and oxamyl). Adults were subjected to vial bioassays. At LC50, 2 populations had higher tolerances to endosulfan than a susceptible reference; tolerance ratios (TR) were 33 and 36, respectively. These 2 populations were collected from cotton fields treated with multiple applications of insecticides in 1994. One of these populations also had significantly higher tolerance to oxamyl (tolerance ratio = 3.6) than the susceptible reference population. For all insecticides tested, LC50s were lower for the 2 populations collected during summer from unsprayed areas compared with the 2 populations collected during summer from areas treated with insecticides in 1994. Insecticide tolerances in insects from spring collections were lower than tolerances in summer-collected insects, except for insects collected from an area of low insecticide use. These differences were significant for 3 of the 4 insecticides-λ—cyhalothrin, endosulfan, and oxamyl—tested. In separate vial bioassays, we compared the insecticide tolerances of L. lineolaris nymphs and adults. At LC50, nymphs were significantly more tolerant (2.4-3.8 ×) to all 4 insecticides.