Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6378470 Journal of Stored Products Research 2014 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
The responses of insects to natural or induced environmental stimuli may be divided into behavioural and metabolic responses. Behavioural responses include orientation towards more favourable conditions or attractants, and avoidance measures such as retreating from treated surfaces into a refuge or descending a concentration gradient of a repellent gas or fumigant. Metabolic responses include aspects of increased metabolism such as when a toxicant is actively excluded from entering the body or the activation of enhanced detoxification pathways following uptake, and aspects of reduced metabolism such as the shutting down of activity, an induced delay in development prolonging a tolerant stage, or a switch to less active biochemical pathways such as anaerobiosis. The response of insects to physical and chemical gradients, treated surfaces, their temperature-related activity responses, their survival at temperature extremes and survival thresholds in toxic atmospheres are discussed in the context of pest survival and the development of resistance in the storage environment.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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