Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4517578 Journal of Stored Products Research 2007 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the duration of immature development and survivorship of Plodia interpunctella (Hübner) on maize over a range of temperatures and grain moisture contents encountered in maize stored on farms in the southeastern states (USA). Laboratory cultures were established with moths collected from farm-stored maize in South Carolina and maintained on cracked maize at 30 °C and 60% r.h. The incubation period and percentage hatch of eggs was determined at 18 combinations of temperature and r.h. Hatch was <1% at 15 and 40 °C. In the range 20-35 °C, percentage hatch declined as temperature increased, and the mean incubation period ranged from 3.1 to 8.5 d. Neither percentage hatch nor incubation period were affected by r.h. between 43% and 76%. The relationship between mean developmental period (oviposition to adult eclosion) and temperature was well described by a quadratic polynomial that predicted a decline from 67.6 to 30.1 d as temperature increased from 20 to 31.1 °C, followed by an increase to 38.5 d as temperature increased further to 35 °C. The results suggest a lower temperature threshold for development near 15 °C and an upper limit slightly greater than 35 °C. Moisture content had a significant effect on developmental period at all the temperatures studied, but the pattern of variation with moisture depended upon the temperature.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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