5 resultados para stored bean pest
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
The aim of this contract was to finalise in vitro rearing on artificial diets of entomophagous insects useful to control insect pests mainly in greenhouses through an analytical and rational approach. The work focuses on the development and optimisation of artificial diets for one coccinellid (Harmonia axyridis), two heteropteran predators (Orius laevigatus, Dicyphus tamaninii), and a braconid parasitoid of aphids (Aphidius ervi). The definition of the artificial diets was based on biochemical analyses of their natural food (aphids) or substitution food for the predators (Ephestia kuehniella eggs). Reliable quality control parameters of the entomophages produced were used in order to adjust dietary composition and formulation of the different diets tested.
Resumo:
The females of the bluemouth rockfish, Helicolenus dactylopterus dactylopterus (DelaRoche, 1809), store sperm within their ovaries for periods of up to 10 months. Twenty six females with standard lengths between 152 and 257 mm and six males with standard lengths between 253 and 209 mm were caught storage crypts with stored spermatozoa and to describe their evolution over the year. After internal fertilization and once sperm reaches the ovary, a crypt forms probably by an epithelial inclusion at the base of the lamellae of one or several spermatozoa groups that are floating freely in the interlamellar space of the ovarian lumen. Stored spermatozoa have a large cytoplasm bag surrounding their heads. This bag could serve as a nutritive reservoir during the long storage period. Many desmosonal and tight junctions between the crypt cells ensure tha male sex cells are protected against the female immune system
Resumo:
Coraebus undatus is the main insect pest of cork oak worldwide. The larvae tunnel in the cortical cambium filling the bark with galleries and causing the cork to break at harvest. The first objective of this study was to test the effect of purple traps in the attraction of C. undatus because this colour is attractive to other buprestid beetles. The second objective was to develop a diet in which field-collected larvae could be reared to adulthood. Pairs of purple and clear (control) sticky traps were placed in a cork oak forest in Girona, Spain in the summer of 2008
Resumo:
Pseudaletia ( Mythimna) unipuncta (Haworth) es una plaga defoliadora del maíz presente año tras año en la Cuenca del Ebro, que realiza en el maíz daños esporádicos pero a veces devastadores. La implantación creciente de maíz resistente a taladros ha producido, en la zona del presente estudio, la disminución casi total de los daños debidos a los taladros Sesamia nonagrioides (Lefebvre) y Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner). Sin embargo, no se sabe aún cómo el incremento de maíz transgénico puede afectar a las poblaciones de P. unipuncta. Actualmente no hay datos sobre biología o parámetros del desarrollo de la especie en la Península Ibérica necesarios para evaluar los posibles efectos de las nuevas variedades utilizadas. Para ello es necesario primero establecer un método de cría adecuado y posteriormente iniciar los estudios sobre la biología de la misma. En el presente trabajo se planteó conocer diferentes parámetros del desarrollo larvario de poblaciones locales de P. unipuncta alimentada sobre hoja de maíz (variedades Tietar y PR33P66) y sobre dos dietas semisintéticas, una a base de alubias. Phaseolus vulgaris, y otra a base de maíz, Zea maya. Los resultados mostraron que las larvas desarrolladas en dieta a base de alubias sufrieron menor mortalidad, que las desarrolladas con planta o sobre la otra dieta, además el peso de las pupas resultantes fue mayor y presentaron menos malformaciones. En cuanto al numero de estadios larvarios, la mayoría pupó tras seis mudas larvarias, necesitando, las de dieta de maíz, estadios larvarios adicionales. Estos resultados indican que la dieta a base de alubias es la más adecuada para posteriores trabajos con esta especie.
Resumo:
Background: Carboxyl/cholinesterases (CCEs) are highly diversified in insects. These enzymes have a broad range of proposed functions, in neuro/developmental processes, dietary detoxification, insecticide resistance or hormone/pheromone degradation. As few functional data are available on purified or recombinant CCEs, the physiological role of most of these enzymes is unknown. Concerning their role in olfaction, only two CCEs able to metabolize sex pheromones have been functionally characterized in insects. These enzymes are only expressed in the male antennae, and secreted into the lumen of the pheromone-sensitive sensilla. CCEs able to hydrolyze other odorants than sex pheromones, such as plant volatiles, have not been identified. Methodology: In Spodoptera littoralis, a major crop pest, a diversity of antennal CCEs has been previously identified. We have employed here a combination of molecular biology, biochemistry and electrophysiology approaches to functionally characterize an intracellular CCE, SlCXE10, whose predominant expression in the olfactory sensilla suggested a role in olfaction. A recombinant protein was produced using the baculovirus system and we tested its catabolic properties towards a plant volatile and the sex pheromone components. Conclusion: We showed that SlCXE10 could efficiently hydrolyze a green leaf volatile and to a lesser extent the sex pheromone components. The transcript level in male antennae was also strongly induced by exposure to this plant odorant. In antennae, SlCXE10 expression was associated with sensilla responding to the sex pheromones and to plant odours. These results suggest that a CCE-based intracellular metabolism of odorants could occur in insect antennae, in addition to the extracellular metabolism occurring within the sensillar lumen. This is the first functional characterization of an Odorant- Degrading Enzyme active towards a host plant volatile.