Contribution of different host plants to the adult population of western bean cutworm

biorxiv(2020)

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摘要
The western bean cutworm, (Smith) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), is historically a pest of both corn ( L.) and dry beans in the western Great Plains. However, it has recently undergone an eastward range expansion establishing itself across the corn belt in twenty-five states and four Canadian provinces. To mitigate the effects of infestation in Michigan, foliar insecticides are used in beans whereas management of the pest in corn relies more heavily on the use of Bt-expressing hybrids. In this study stable carbon isotope analysis was used to determine what crop adult moths developed on as larvae with analysis showing that very few of the adult moths developed on beans in their larval state. These results suggest that beans and corn are not suitable as co-refuges and that mainly adults which developed on corn are contributing to the next generation of western bean cutworm in Michigan.
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