Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival

The application of methoprene and access to protein in adult diet has been shown to enhance mating success in male melon fly Bactrocera cucurbitae Coquillett (Diptera: Tephritidae), supporting their incorporation into operational area-wide programmes integrating the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of methoprene, diet including protein and feeding days on male starvation survival to determine the minimum number of feeding days required prior to male release in the field. The study was performed in the laboratory by treating males with (i) both protein and methoprene (M+P+), (ii) only protein (M−P+), (iii) only methoprene (M+P−) or (iv) untreated (M−P−). The males were starved after exposure for an increasing number of days (1-7) to their respective treatment. Mean longevity was highest after 3-day post-emergence feeding duration for M+P+, M+P− and M−P− males, but 4 days of feeding for M−P+ males. Additional feeding days after 4 days, did not increase male survival and feeding for 7 days decreased starvation survival of sugar-fed males. Application of methoprene and/or access to diet including protein had no adverse effect on starvation survival but feeding duration had a significant positive effect on starvation survival. To the contrary, the current study provides a strong evidence for the benefits of methoprene application and protein incorporation into the adult diet of sterile males. Treated males achieve higher sexual success, reach sexual development several days earlier, and are therefore much closer to sexual maturity when released in SIT action programmes after being held in the fly emergence and release facility for a post-emergence feeding duration of at least 3 days.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Haq, I., Caceres, C. autor/a, Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67, Soriano, D. autor/a, Jessup, A. autor/a, Hendrichs, Jorge. autor/a, Teal, P. E. A. autor/a, Robinson, A. S. autor/a
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Bactrocera cucurbitae, Dietas para insectos, Metopreno, Técnica del insecto estéril,
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:37272
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Bactrocera cucurbitae
Dietas para insectos
Metopreno
Técnica del insecto estéril
Bactrocera cucurbitae
Dietas para insectos
Metopreno
Técnica del insecto estéril
spellingShingle Bactrocera cucurbitae
Dietas para insectos
Metopreno
Técnica del insecto estéril
Bactrocera cucurbitae
Dietas para insectos
Metopreno
Técnica del insecto estéril
Haq, I.
Caceres, C. autor/a
Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67
Soriano, D. autor/a
Jessup, A. autor/a
Hendrichs, Jorge. autor/a
Teal, P. E. A. autor/a
Robinson, A. S. autor/a
Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
description The application of methoprene and access to protein in adult diet has been shown to enhance mating success in male melon fly Bactrocera cucurbitae Coquillett (Diptera: Tephritidae), supporting their incorporation into operational area-wide programmes integrating the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of methoprene, diet including protein and feeding days on male starvation survival to determine the minimum number of feeding days required prior to male release in the field. The study was performed in the laboratory by treating males with (i) both protein and methoprene (M+P+), (ii) only protein (M−P+), (iii) only methoprene (M+P−) or (iv) untreated (M−P−). The males were starved after exposure for an increasing number of days (1-7) to their respective treatment. Mean longevity was highest after 3-day post-emergence feeding duration for M+P+, M+P− and M−P− males, but 4 days of feeding for M−P+ males. Additional feeding days after 4 days, did not increase male survival and feeding for 7 days decreased starvation survival of sugar-fed males. Application of methoprene and/or access to diet including protein had no adverse effect on starvation survival but feeding duration had a significant positive effect on starvation survival. To the contrary, the current study provides a strong evidence for the benefits of methoprene application and protein incorporation into the adult diet of sterile males. Treated males achieve higher sexual success, reach sexual development several days earlier, and are therefore much closer to sexual maturity when released in SIT action programmes after being held in the fly emergence and release facility for a post-emergence feeding duration of at least 3 days.
format Texto
topic_facet Bactrocera cucurbitae
Dietas para insectos
Metopreno
Técnica del insecto estéril
author Haq, I.
Caceres, C. autor/a
Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67
Soriano, D. autor/a
Jessup, A. autor/a
Hendrichs, Jorge. autor/a
Teal, P. E. A. autor/a
Robinson, A. S. autor/a
author_facet Haq, I.
Caceres, C. autor/a
Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67
Soriano, D. autor/a
Jessup, A. autor/a
Hendrichs, Jorge. autor/a
Teal, P. E. A. autor/a
Robinson, A. S. autor/a
author_sort Haq, I.
title Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
title_short Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
title_full Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
title_fullStr Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
title_full_unstemmed Effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
title_sort effect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:372722024-03-12T12:35:59ZEffect of methoprene application, adult food and feeding duration on male melon fly starvation survival Haq, I. Caceres, C. autor/a Liedo Fernández, Pablo Doctor autor/a 67 Soriano, D. autor/a Jessup, A. autor/a Hendrichs, Jorge. autor/a Teal, P. E. A. autor/a Robinson, A. S. autor/a textengThe application of methoprene and access to protein in adult diet has been shown to enhance mating success in male melon fly Bactrocera cucurbitae Coquillett (Diptera: Tephritidae), supporting their incorporation into operational area-wide programmes integrating the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of methoprene, diet including protein and feeding days on male starvation survival to determine the minimum number of feeding days required prior to male release in the field. The study was performed in the laboratory by treating males with (i) both protein and methoprene (M+P+), (ii) only protein (M−P+), (iii) only methoprene (M+P−) or (iv) untreated (M−P−). The males were starved after exposure for an increasing number of days (1-7) to their respective treatment. Mean longevity was highest after 3-day post-emergence feeding duration for M+P+, M+P− and M−P− males, but 4 days of feeding for M−P+ males. Additional feeding days after 4 days, did not increase male survival and feeding for 7 days decreased starvation survival of sugar-fed males. Application of methoprene and/or access to diet including protein had no adverse effect on starvation survival but feeding duration had a significant positive effect on starvation survival. To the contrary, the current study provides a strong evidence for the benefits of methoprene application and protein incorporation into the adult diet of sterile males. Treated males achieve higher sexual success, reach sexual development several days earlier, and are therefore much closer to sexual maturity when released in SIT action programmes after being held in the fly emergence and release facility for a post-emergence feeding duration of at least 3 days.The application of methoprene and access to protein in adult diet has been shown to enhance mating success in male melon fly Bactrocera cucurbitae Coquillett (Diptera: Tephritidae), supporting their incorporation into operational area-wide programmes integrating the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of methoprene, diet including protein and feeding days on male starvation survival to determine the minimum number of feeding days required prior to male release in the field. The study was performed in the laboratory by treating males with (i) both protein and methoprene (M+P+), (ii) only protein (M−P+), (iii) only methoprene (M+P−) or (iv) untreated (M−P−). The males were starved after exposure for an increasing number of days (1-7) to their respective treatment. Mean longevity was highest after 3-day post-emergence feeding duration for M+P+, M+P− and M−P− males, but 4 days of feeding for M−P+ males. Additional feeding days after 4 days, did not increase male survival and feeding for 7 days decreased starvation survival of sugar-fed males. Application of methoprene and/or access to diet including protein had no adverse effect on starvation survival but feeding duration had a significant positive effect on starvation survival. To the contrary, the current study provides a strong evidence for the benefits of methoprene application and protein incorporation into the adult diet of sterile males. Treated males achieve higher sexual success, reach sexual development several days earlier, and are therefore much closer to sexual maturity when released in SIT action programmes after being held in the fly emergence and release facility for a post-emergence feeding duration of at least 3 days.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorBactrocera cucurbitaeDietas para insectosMetoprenoTécnica del insecto estérilDisponible en líneaJournal of Applied EntomologyDisponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso