Responses of Corcyra cephalonica (Stainton) to pirimiphos-methyl, spinosad, and combinations of pirimiphos-methyl and synergized pyrethrins

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-1-2004

Abstract

Field control failures with pirimiphos-methyl against the rice moth, Corcyra cephalonica (Stainton), in Weslaco, Texas, USA, led us to investigate the susceptibility of this particular strain to pirimiphos-methyl, spinosad, pyrethrins synergized with piperonyl butoxide, and pirimiphos-methyl combined with synergized pyrethrins. In laboratory bioassays, 50 eggs of C cephalonica were exposed to untreated and insecticide-treated corn and sunflower seeds to determine larval survival after 21 days, egg-to-adult emergence after 49 days, and larval damage to seeds at both exposure periods. Pirimiphos-methyl at both 4 and 8 mg kg-1 did not prevent larval survival or egg-to-adult emergence of C cephalonica on either corn or sunflower seeds, and seed damage was evident at both rates. The C cephalonica strain was highly susceptible to spinosad at 0.5 and 1 mgkg-1. At both spinosad rates, reduction in larval survival, egg-to-adult emergence, and seed damage relative to the control treatment was ≥93% on both corn and sunflower seeds. Pirimiphos-methyl and spinosad were generally more effective against C cephalonica on corn than sunflower seeds. The C cephalonica strain was completely controlled on corn treated with 1.5 mg kg-1 of pyrethrins synergized with 15 mg kg-1 of piperonyl butoxide. Many larvae survived and became adults on corn treated with synergized pyrethrins at ≤0.75 mg kg-1. Corn treated with pirimiphos-methyl at 4, 6 or 8 mg kg-1 in combination with 0.38 to 1.5 mg kg-1 of synergized pyrethrins reduced larval survival by ≥95%, egg-to-adult emergence by ≥97%, and seed damage by ≥94%. Our results suggest that the C cephalonica strain can be controlled on corn by combining pirimiphos-methyl with synergized pyrethrins or with synergized pyrethrins at the labeled rate. Although spinosad is not currently labeled for use on stored corn and sunflower seeds, it appears to be effective against C cephalonica on both commodities at very low rates. © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Pest Management Science

First Page

191

Last Page

198

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