ADAPTABILITY AND EFFICACY OF TRANSGENIC AND WILD-TYPE METASEIULUS-OCCIDENTALIS (ACARI, PHYTOSEIIDAE) COMPARED AS PART OF A RISK ASSESSMENT

Authors
Citation
Jb. Li et Ma. Hoy, ADAPTABILITY AND EFFICACY OF TRANSGENIC AND WILD-TYPE METASEIULUS-OCCIDENTALIS (ACARI, PHYTOSEIIDAE) COMPARED AS PART OF A RISK ASSESSMENT, Experimental & applied acarology, 20(10), 1996, pp. 563-573
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology
ISSN journal
01688162
Volume
20
Issue
10
Year of publication
1996
Pages
563 - 573
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-8162(1996)20:10<563:AAEOTA>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Comparisons between transgenic (T) and wild-type Metaseiulus occidenta lis colonies (COS) were made under laboratory conditions as part of a risk assessment effort prior to proposed field releases. There were no differences between the transgenic T18 colony and the COS strain in t he daily egg production, hatchability at three temperatures and four r elative humidity (RH) conditions, diapause incidence, or proportion of female progeny produced. Metaseiulus occidentalis eggs do not hatch a t 38 degrees C under any RH tested, nor at 33.5 degrees C under 100% R H, indicating that high temperature and extreme RH affect egg hatch ne gatively. At 28.5 and 33.5 degrees C, fewer eggs hatched at 32.5% than at 75.5 and 93% RH. Metaseiulus occidentalis cannot survive on any pl ant tested without prey nor on a diet of pollen alone; adult female mi tes cannot prey or survive on a diet of eggs and larvae of two lepidop teran species, indicating that the suitability of food sources has not been altered in the transgenic strain. Two subcolonies, derived from two transgenic strains using single females, differed in the rate of e gg hatch at 28.5 degrees C under 32.5 and 100% RH, indicating that red uced genetic variation and/or random genetic drift in the two lines ma y have led to differences in some biological characters. Since we did not find any significant differences between the T18 and COS colonies in the traits tested, the T18 colony is not expected to exhibit any ne w biological attributes in a proposed short-term field release.