Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4558701 Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 2008 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The changes of inheritance mode and fitness of resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner) along with its resistance evolution to Cry1Ac toxin were evaluated in the laboratory. The resistance levels reached 170.0-, 209.6- and 2893.3-fold, on selection of the field population in the 16th (BtR-F16), 34th (BtR-F34) and 87th (BtR-F87) generation with artificial diet containing Cry1Ac toxin, respectively. As the resistance levels increased, more larvae feeding on the Bt cotton expressing Cry1Ac toxin survived. Most larvae of BtR-F87 could develop to the 5th instar and about 3% individuals reached the adult stage. The inheritance of Cry1Ac resistance trait at three resistant levels was autosomal and incompletely recessive, but the degree of dominance decreased as the resistance increased. The resistance was primarily monogenic in BtR-F16 strain, but polygenic as resistance increased. The relative fitness of H. armigera, measured as a ratio of R0 (the net replacement rate) of resistant strain divided by R0 of the susceptible strain, decreased with an increase of the resistance levels, with ratios of 0.79, 0.64 and 0.59 in their respective BtR-F16, BtR-F34 and BtR-F87 strains.

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