Gl. Reed et al., Transgenic Bt potato and conventional insecticides for Colorado potato beetle management: comparative efficacy and non-target impacts, ENT EXP APP, 100(1), 2001, pp. 89-100
Field studies were conducted in 1992 and 1993 in Hermiston, Oregon, to eval
uate the efficacy of transgenic Bt potato (Newleaf(R), which expresses the
insecticidal protein Cry3Aa) and conventional insecticide spray programs ag
ainst the important potato pest, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say), Colorado
potato beetle (CPB), and their relative impact on non-target arthropods in
potato ecosystems. Results from the two years of field trials demonstrated
that Newleaf potato plants were highly effective in suppressing populations
of CPB, and provided better CPB control than weekly sprays of a microbial
Bt-based formulation containing Cry3Aa, bi-weekly applications of permethri
n, or early- and mid-season applications of systemic insecticides (phorate
and disulfoton). When compared with conventional potato plants not treated
with any insecticides, the effective control of CPB by Newleaf potato plant
s or weekly sprays of a Bt-based formulation did not significantly impact t
he abundance of beneficial predators or secondary potato pests. In contrast
to Newleaf potato plants or microbial Bt formulations, however, bi-weekly
applications of permethrin significantly reduced the abundance of several m
ajor generalist predators such as spiders (Araneae), big-eyed bugs (Geocoru
s sp.), damsel bugs (Nabid sp.), and minute pirate bugs (Orius sp.), and re
sulted in significant increases in the abundance of green peach aphid (GPA)
, Myzus persicae (Sulzer) - vector of viral diseases, on the treated potato
plots. While systemic insecticides appeared to have reduced the abundance
of some plant sap-feeding insects such as GPA, lygus bugs, and leafhoppers,
early and mid-season applications of these insecticides had no significant
impact on populations of the major beneficial predators. Thus, transgenic
Bt potato, Bt-based microbial formulations and systemic insecticides appear
ed to be compatible with the development of integrated pest management (IPM
) against other potato pests such as GPA because these CPB control measures
have little impact on major natural enemies. In contrast, the broad-spectr
um pyrethroid insecticide (permethrin) is less compatible with IPM programs
against GPA and the potato leafroll viral disease.