Return to search

Investigations of Colorado potato beetle [Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say)] pest management including: sampling strategies for insecticide resistance detection, development of a knowledge-based expert system and the physiology of cold tolerance

Within-field variation in mortality of Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say), in a filter-paper insecticide bioassay was determined in three Virginia potato fields in 1989 and five fields in 1990. Bioassays were performed for each of three different insecticides on Colorado potato beetle larvae collected from 12-16 different locations (equal sized blocks) per field. Comparisons of 95% mortality confidence intervals between all block combinations per field indicated that field size had no influence on variation in Colorado potato beetle mortality in the bioassay. No apparent relationship existed between the level of Colorado potato beetle insecticide susceptibility (LC₉₀ value) and percentage of mortality confidence interval overlap among field blocks. Bioassay data from the sample fields indicated that a single bioassay (of potato beetles from one location per field) will yield at least a 0.50 probability (> 0.90 in six of the eight fields) of estimating the mean mortality response (± 5%) of Colorado potato beetle in the entire field. The probability of sampling potato beetles from one location which differed in mean mortality (P ≤ 0.05) from individuals collected in another location within the same field decreased as the number of locations sampled increased (i.e., the probability is 0.12 if three locations are sampled).

Filter paper insecticide bioassays were performed on Colorado potato beetles collected from three commercial potato fields to determine the most cost-effective number of bioassay sample units (filter paper disks, 10 larvae per disk). Relative net precision values from three different insecticide bioassays were used as an indication of sample size efficiency, and were based on variation in larval mortality and sample cost. Greatest sample size efficiency in all insecticide bioassays was achieved from a sample of two to five filter paper disk sample units (20-50 total larvae). Additional insecticide bioassays were performed on Colorado potato beetle larvae collected at different times during the potato growing season (from a commercial potato field and from experiment station plots) to determine whether the larval generation sampled or previous insecticide application affected results of the bioassay. Although trends in mortality were not always consistent among first generation larvae sampled on different dates (from insecticide-treated and untreated plots), first generation larvae exhibited significantly (P ≤0.05) greater mortality in the bioassay compared with second generation larvae. Based on these results, we recommend that bioassays to estimate the effectiveness of a particular insecticide against Colorado potato beetle be performed on the target generation immediately before the planned insecticide treatment.

PIES (potato insect expert system) is a knowledge-based system for Colorado potato beetle insecticide management in commercial potato fields on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. PIES was written using VP-Expert, a rule-based expert system shell, and uses Colorado potato beetle lifestage, potato growth stage, percent defoliation, and other factors to decide if an insecticide application is necessary to prevent tuber yield loss due to Colorado potato beetle pressure. Field tests at the Eastern Shore Agricultural Experiment Station compared PIES with conventional spray thresholds based on the number of Colorado potato beetles per stem. Tuber yields were not significantly different (P ≤ 0.05) between the two methods, while PIES recommended, on average, 3.7 insecticide applications and conventional thresholds required six insecticide applications. An additional benefit of PIES is that scouting requirements are simpler and quicker than the conventional stem counts.

Supercooling points determined for Colorado potato beetle populations from Maine, Washington, and Prince Edward Island, Canada, suggest these populations are freeze-tolerant, that is, they can sustain ice formation within their body fluids. Colorado potato beetles collected from Virginia supercooled at a significantly (P ≤ 0.05) lower temperature than the other Colorado potato beetle populations. The temperature at which Virginia Colorado potato beetle supercooled is indicative of freeze-sensitive species and may indicate divergence in the mechanisms Colorado potato beetle are using for cold tolerance.

Two polyhydric alcohols (polyols) were isolated in the hemolymph of Colorado potato beetle using high performance thin layer chromatography. The polyols were tentatively identified as inositol and xylitol. / Ph. D.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/39930
Date14 October 2005
CreatorsTisler, Anne Marie
ContributorsEntomology, Zehnder, G.W., Cochran, Donald G., Heatwole, Conrad D., Mullins, Donald, Dfeiffer, D.G.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation, Text
Formatxi, 111 leaves, BTD, application/pdf, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
RelationOCLC# 26353917, LD5655.V856_1991.T5265.pdf

Page generated in 0.0019 seconds