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William A. Donahue, Jr., Ph.D. Sumiko De La Vega Sierra Research Laboratories, Modesto, CA Nebraska Urban Pest Management Conference February 12-13, 2013
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The ability of a significant portion of a pest population to survive a pesticide at rates that once killed most individuals of that population. A genetic change in response to selection. A natural process controlled by genetics and expressed in specific biochemical processes.
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Metabolic – changes in detoxification (enzyme) system within the arthropod. Target Site Insensitivity - receptors Reduced Penetration - arthropod cuticle or plant surfaces (leaves) Behavioral - avoidance
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High Intensity Cropping Systems – Agriculture Food Production Animal Operations Disease Vector Control Programs Urban Pest Control Programs Commodity Treatments Routine pest control relying primarily on chemical control, often a single pesticide or class of pesticides.
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1930’s – 40’s: DDT insecticide of choice 1952-1956 DDT resistance wide spread 1950’s: Malathion insecticide of choice 1960-2000: Low incidence of bed bugs world wide 1990’s: Pyrethroids insecticides of choice
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Resistance is quick to develop to compounds with high effective kill, long residual and are highly selective at a single biochemical target site. Why? High Selection Pressure within the Population!
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Resistance – The genetically acquired ability of an organism to survive a pesticide application at doses that once killed most individuals of the same species. Baseline dose response Field-collection and colony start-up Diff. rates of reproduction, length of time until obtaining usable numbers
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Evaluate the insecticide susceptibility of specific populations of bed bugs Compare dose response bioassays of selected populations Establish discriminating dose bioassays
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“Harlan/Ft. Dix” – susceptible laboratory strain in colony since 1973, obtained 2008 “Earl” –pyrethroid-susceptible field strain, collected in Modesto, Stanislaus County, CA, 2007 “Cincinnati” –field strain, collected in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, OH, 2007, pyrethroid- resistant upon initial testing “James” – pyrethroid-susceptible field strain collected in Modesto, Stanislaus County, CA, 2009 “Jersey” – moderately pyrethroid-resistant field strain collected in Jersey City, Hudson County, NJ, 2010 “Wolverine” –moderately pyrethroid-resistant field strain collected in Modesto, Stanislaus County, CA, 2010 “Stockton 2” – highly pyrethroid-resistant field strain collected in Stockton, San Joaquin County, CA, 2011 © Sierra Research Laboratories, 2012
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© Sierra Research Laboratories, 2010 Formulated Permethrin LD evaluations – in 2008, 2010, and 2012 Permethrin technical – 0.05% Deltamethrin technical – 0.05% Imidacloprid technical – 0.05% Propoxur technical – 0.5%
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LD and LT Evaluations – Materials and Methods 1 mL test substance applied inside a wax outline of a 10 cm circle on a glass panel 10 bed bugs per replicate, mixed sex ratio, confined with a 100 x 15 mm Petri dish lid Mortality: 5, 15, 30, 45, 60 min, 2, 4, 6, and 24, 48, 72, 96, and 120 hr.
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Initial Permethrin Dose Response Test, 2008 Harlan strain 100% mortality at 24 hours at all rates - 0.0005%, 0.005%, 0.05%, and 0.5% Cincinnati strain Maximum % mortality was 20.0% at the 0.5% rate (approximately 10x label rate!)
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Permethrin Dose Response Test – Establishing Baselines For New Field Strains and Re-evaluating Existing Strains, 2010
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Permethrin Lethal Time Tests Repeated Over a Span of Two Years Against “Earl” susceptible field strain
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Permethrin Lethal Time Tests Repeated Over a Span of Four Years Against “Cincinnati” Resistant Field Strain
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Resistance is slow to develop with inefficient, short residual compounds because selection pressure is low! Select compounds that interfere with multiple biochemical or physiological systems. Mixtures like Botanical Insecticides, Synergists, IGR’s Refugia – A source of susceptible individuals (genetic) within a population – Don’t Kill ‘em All! Integrated Pest Management – Ecology in Action!
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Discriminating dose – important in evaluating a newly-collected field strain or assisting PMPs in selecting treatments Full Dose Response – difficult to run on new populations Genetic shifts in populations associated with resistance – need to re-evaluate colonies over time
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© Sierra Research Laboratories, 2010
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