Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)

The H. armigera larvae of the Mahaboobnagar district recorded a LD50 of 29.125 µg larva-1 and 59.609 µg larva-1 at LD90 for cypermethrin. The LD50 and LD90 values of cypermethrin for Raichur population of H armigera was 32.481 and 38.172 µglarva-1, respectively. Toxicity of cypermethrin to Nagpur p...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. Upendhar, K. Vani Sree, J. Satyanarayana, T. V. K. Singh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Puspa Publishing House 2017-05-01
Series:International Journal of Economic Plants
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJEP/article/view/4502
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846123067041906688
author S. Upendhar
K. Vani Sree
J. Satyanarayana
T. V. K. Singh
author_facet S. Upendhar
K. Vani Sree
J. Satyanarayana
T. V. K. Singh
author_sort S. Upendhar
collection DOAJ
description The H. armigera larvae of the Mahaboobnagar district recorded a LD50 of 29.125 µg larva-1 and 59.609 µg larva-1 at LD90 for cypermethrin. The LD50 and LD90 values of cypermethrin for Raichur population of H armigera was 32.481 and 38.172 µglarva-1, respectively. Toxicity of cypermethrin to Nagpur population of H. armigera showed that the LD50 and LD90 values were 20.069 and 54.708 µg larva-1, respectively, The chi-square test revealed that the population used in the study was homogenous (*p<0.05%). The H. armigera larvae of the Mahaboobnagar district recorded a LD50 of 3.651 µg larva-1 and 10.287 µg larva-1 at LD90 for methomyl. The LD50 and LD90 values of methomyl for Raichur population of H armigera was 3.630 and 10.417 µg larva-1, respectively, while Toxicity of methomyl  to Nagpur population of H. armigera showed that the LD50 and LD90 values were 2.652 and 7.214 µg larva-1, respectively,  when the chi-square test revealed that the population used in the study was homogenous (*p<0.05%). From, the results obtained we can conclude that the continuous application of same chemistries across the generations increases the resistance from F1 to F3. Alternating with the new chemistries results in no cross resistance development as it was observed in all the three populations.
format Article
id doaj-art-97be95dbf839470ab2660430a299eb3b
institution Kabale University
issn 2349-4735
language English
publishDate 2017-05-01
publisher Puspa Publishing House
record_format Article
series International Journal of Economic Plants
spelling doaj-art-97be95dbf839470ab2660430a299eb3b2024-12-14T08:31:26ZengPuspa Publishing HouseInternational Journal of Economic Plants2349-47352017-05-014May, 2Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)S. Upendhar0K. Vani Sree1J. Satyanarayana2T. V. K. Singh3Dept. of Entomology, PJTSAU Agricultural College, Jagtial (505 529), IndiaDept. of Entomology, PJTSAU Agricultural College, Jagtial (505 529), IndiaCollege of Agriculture, PJTSAU, Rajendranagar, Hyderabad (500 030), IndiaCollege of Agriculture, PJTSAU, Rajendranagar, Hyderabad (500 030), India The H. armigera larvae of the Mahaboobnagar district recorded a LD50 of 29.125 µg larva-1 and 59.609 µg larva-1 at LD90 for cypermethrin. The LD50 and LD90 values of cypermethrin for Raichur population of H armigera was 32.481 and 38.172 µglarva-1, respectively. Toxicity of cypermethrin to Nagpur population of H. armigera showed that the LD50 and LD90 values were 20.069 and 54.708 µg larva-1, respectively, The chi-square test revealed that the population used in the study was homogenous (*p<0.05%). The H. armigera larvae of the Mahaboobnagar district recorded a LD50 of 3.651 µg larva-1 and 10.287 µg larva-1 at LD90 for methomyl. The LD50 and LD90 values of methomyl for Raichur population of H armigera was 3.630 and 10.417 µg larva-1, respectively, while Toxicity of methomyl  to Nagpur population of H. armigera showed that the LD50 and LD90 values were 2.652 and 7.214 µg larva-1, respectively,  when the chi-square test revealed that the population used in the study was homogenous (*p<0.05%). From, the results obtained we can conclude that the continuous application of same chemistries across the generations increases the resistance from F1 to F3. Alternating with the new chemistries results in no cross resistance development as it was observed in all the three populations. https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJEP/article/view/4502Helicoverpa armigera, resistance, cypermethrin, methomyl
spellingShingle S. Upendhar
K. Vani Sree
J. Satyanarayana
T. V. K. Singh
Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
International Journal of Economic Plants
Helicoverpa armigera, resistance, cypermethrin, methomyl
title Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
title_full Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
title_fullStr Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
title_full_unstemmed Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
title_short Cypermethrin and Methomyl Resistance in Helicoverpa armigera (Hubner)
title_sort cypermethrin and methomyl resistance in helicoverpa armigera hubner
topic Helicoverpa armigera, resistance, cypermethrin, methomyl
url https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJEP/article/view/4502
work_keys_str_mv AT supendhar cypermethrinandmethomylresistanceinhelicoverpaarmigerahubner
AT kvanisree cypermethrinandmethomylresistanceinhelicoverpaarmigerahubner
AT jsatyanarayana cypermethrinandmethomylresistanceinhelicoverpaarmigerahubner
AT tvksingh cypermethrinandmethomylresistanceinhelicoverpaarmigerahubner