4.7 Article

Field-Evolved Sulfoxaflor Resistance of Three Wheat Aphid Species in China

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy11112325

Keywords

insecticide resistance; sulfoxaflor; toxicity difference; wheat aphid

Funding

  1. China Agriculture Research System of MOF and MARA [CARS-3]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31772163]
  3. SINOGRAIN II [CHN-17/0019]
  4. Tianshan Young Talents [2019Q051]
  5. Research and Integrated Demonstration of Green Yielding and Quality Enhancement Technologies for Major Grain Crops in Xinjiang [2021B02002]

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Wheat aphid species in different regions of China show varying degrees of resistance to sulfoxaflor, with populations of Rhopalosiphum padi and Metopolophium dirhodum more likely to develop resistance compared to Sitobion miscanthi. These findings offer new insights into insecticide resistance development and rational sulfoxaflor use.
Sulfoxaflor belongs to a new class of insecticides which are effective against many sap-feeding pests. Sitobion miscanthi, Rhopalosiphum padi, and Metopolophium dirhodum are the predominant pests coexisting on wheat plants. It is unknown whether these aphid species have developed resistance to sulfoxaflor. Here, the susceptibilities of three wheat aphid species from different regions of China to sulfoxaflor were evaluated. The results showed that two S. miscanthi, one R. padi, and two M. dirhodum field populations were highly resistant to sulfoxaflor. Additionally, 13 S. miscanthi, 9 R. padi, and 4 M. dirhodum field populations were moderately resistant to sulfoxaflor. Analysis of differences in toxicity showed that the susceptibility levels of R. padi in 9 of 20 regions, M. dirhodum in 5 of 9 regions, and M. dirhodum in 3 of 9 regions to sulfoxaflor were greater than those of S. miscanthi, S. miscanthi, and R. padi in the same regions, respectively. Thus, each wheat aphid species has field populations that are highly sulfoxaflor resistant. The R. padi and M. dirhodum populations were more susceptible to sulfoxaflor than those of S. miscanthi. These findings provide new insights into insecticide resistance development and rational sulfoxaflor use.

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