Techniques for Efficient Mass Rearing and Infestation in Screening for Host Plant Resistance to Corn Earworm, Heliothis Zea


Book Description

The practice of growing varieties, lines or hybrids resistant to attack by insects, and their subsequenty effectiveness in reducing pest populations and corresponding crop losses, is well documented for several agricultural crops and pest species. The development of many of these resitant cultivars has resulted from or been facilitated by many years of study of the insect pests, the development of techniques to mass rear the insects, artificially infest the crop species, and screen the germplasm of the species (or their wild relatives) for resistance, and the successful application of appropriate breending procedures for improvement of the resistance characteristic over succeeding cycles or generations of population improvement (Guthrie, 1974, 1980). The basic components necessary to identify or developed germaplasm with resitance, or with higher levels of resistance than present cultivars utilized by farmer/producers, include: (1) A colony of the insect species, which exhibits the vigor and vitality of the damaging pest population within the geographical area that is affected. (2) The capability to efficiently mass culture the species, including the rearing facility, trained personnel, natural, meridic, or defined diets, and rearing procedures and containers. (3) Germaplasm resources that area representative of the genetic variation within the crop and/or its closely related species. (4) Methods for uniform artificial infestation. (5) Methods for assessing resultant damage, or lack of damage, to the plants subjected to deliberate infestation (rating scales to determine classes or categories of resistance or susceptibility). (6) Screening to determine whether adequate levels of resistance exist within suitable agronomic types (equivalent or better than currently grown cultivars), and effective selection/breeding scheme established to improve either the resistance levels or agronomic characteristics of the "improved" materials.




Efficient Mass Rearing and Infestation Techniques to Screen for Host Plant Resistance to Maize Stem Borers, Diatraea Sp


Book Description

The practice of growing varieties, lines or hybrids resistant to attack by insects and their subsequent effectiveness in reducing pest populations and corresponding crop losses, is well documented for several agricultural crops and pest species. The development of many of these resistant cultivars has resulted from or been facilitated by (1) many years of study of the insect pests, (2) the developement of techniques to mass near the insects, articially infest the crop species, and screen the germplasm of the species for their wild relatives) for resistance, and (3) the successful application of appropriate breeding procedures for improvement of the resistance characteristic over succeeding cycles or generations of population improvement. The basic components necessary to identify or develop germplasm with resistance, or with higher levels of resistance than present cultivars utilized by farmer/producers, include: (1) A colony of the insect species, which exhibits the vigor and vitality of the damaging pest population within the geographical area that is affected. (2) The capability to efficiently mass culture the species, including the rearing facility, trained personnel, natural, meridic, or defined diets, and rearing procedures and containers. (3) Germplasm resources that are representative of the genetic variation within the crop and/or its closely related species. (4) Methods for uniform artificial infestation. (5) Methods for assessing resultant damage, or lack of damage, to the plants subjected to deliberate infestation (rating scales to determine classes or categories of resistance or susceptibility). (6) Screening to determine whether adequate levels of resistance exist within suitable agronomic types (equivalent or better than currently grown cultivars), and an effective selection/breeding scheme established to improve either the resistance levels or agronomic characteristics of the "improved" materials.




Techniques for Evaluating Insect Resistance in Crop Plants


Book Description

This comprehensive book is the first illustrated volume to provide detailed discussions of all plant genera regarding techniques developed to evaluate plant resistance to insects. Many of the book's references have never before appeared in a volume on this subject. The authors systematically discuss techniques used to evaluate different types of insect behavior and plant morphological and phytochemical factors responsible for plant resistance and susceptibility to insects.







Plant Resistance to Arthropods


Book Description

This book synthesizes new information about the environmental advantages of plant resistance, transgenic resistance, the molecular bases of resistance, and the use of molecular markers to map resistance genes. Readers are presented in-depth descriptions of techniques to quantify resistance, factors affecting resistance expression, and the deployment of resistance genes. New information about gene-for-gene interactions between resistant plants and arthropod biotypes is discussed along with the recent examples of using arthropod resistant plants in integrated pest management systems.




Insect Resistant Maize


Book Description

Mechanisms and bases of resistance; The genetics of resistance; Biotechnological manipulation of resistance; Advances in techniques, rearing, rating bioassays, mechanism detection; Resistance verification and utilization; Country reports.