bifenthrin and pyridaben

bifenthrin has been researched along with pyridaben* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for bifenthrin and pyridaben

ArticleYear
Incidence and inheritance of resistance to METI-acaricides in European strains of the two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae) (Acari: Tetranychidae).
    Pest management science, 2001, Volume: 57, Issue:5

    A strain of Tetranychus urticae (Koch; Acari: Tetranychidae), collected from hops (Humulus humuli L; Cannabaceae) in England with a short history of tebufenpyrad use, exhibited resistance to four METI (mitochondrial electron transport inhibitor)-acaricides; tebufenpyrad, pyridaben, fenazaquin and fenpyroximate. Resistance factors for these compounds in a microimmersion assay were 46, 346, 168 and 77 respectively, and corresponded to those exhibited by a Japanese METI-acaricide-resistant reference strain. Levels of resistance remained stable without further selection, and selection with tebufenpyrad did not increase them. The UK strain was also resistant (c 6-fold) to bifenthrin. Crosses of homozygous, diploid females with hemizygous, haploid males showed that, in the UK strain, METI-acaricide resistance was paternally and maternally inherited, and was an incompletely dominant trait. Another tebufenpyrad-resistant strain from the UK, originating from a chrysanthemum nursery (Chrysanthemum foeniculaceum Giseke; Asteraceae) was collected eight months later at a site c 210 km distant from the first. These are the first published incidences of METI-acaricide resistance in Europe and implications for the future use of these compounds are discussed.

    Topics: Animals; Benzoates; Biological Assay; Cannabis; Chrysanthemum cinerariifolium; Crosses, Genetic; Electron Transport; Europe; Extrachromosomal Inheritance; Fabaceae; Female; Genes, Dominant; Insecticide Resistance; Insecticides; Male; Mites; Mitochondria; Plants, Medicinal; Pyrazoles; Pyrethrins; Pyridazines; Quinazolines; Reproduction

2001