1. Oral and Topical Insecticide Response Bioassays and Associated Statistical Analyses Used Commonly in Veterinary and Medical Entomology
- Author
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Christopher J. Geden, Edwin R Burgess, and Bethia H. King
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,AcademicSubjects/SCI01382 ,Veterinary medicine ,Insecticides ,Medical entomology ,probit analysis ,Spinosad ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,R programming ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Houseflies ,parasitic diseases ,Nitriles ,Pyrethrins ,medicine ,Bioassay ,Animals ,pesticide ,Pyrethroid ,business.industry ,Special Collection: Protocols in Medical and Veterinary Entomology ,fungi ,Pest control ,General Medicine ,Pesticide ,biology.organism_classification ,010602 entomology ,Drug Combinations ,house fly ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Muscidae ,Biological Assay ,Female ,PEST analysis ,Macrolides ,business ,Protocols ,010606 plant biology & botany ,medicine.drug ,toxicology - Abstract
Veterinary and medical entomologists who are involved in research on pest control often need to perform dose–response bioassays and analyze the results. This article is meant as a beginner’s guide for doing this and includes instructions for using the free program R for the analyses. The bioassays and analyses are described using previously unpublished data from bioassays on house flies, Musca domestica Linnaeus (Diptera: Muscidae), but can be used on a wide range of pest species. Flies were exposed topically to beta-cyfluthrin, a pyrethroid, or exposed to spinosad or spinetoram in sugar to encourage consumption. LD50 values for beta-cyfluthrin in a susceptible strain were similar regardless of whether mortality was assessed at 24 or 48 h, consistent with it being a relatively quick-acting insecticide. Based on LC50 values, spinetoram was about twice as toxic as spinosad in a susceptible strain, suggesting a benefit to formulating spinetoram for house fly control, although spinetoram was no more toxic than spinosad for a pyrethroid-resistant strain. Results were consistent with previous reports of spinosad exhibiting little cross-resistance. For both spinosad and spinetoram, LC50 values were not greatly different between the pyrethroid-resistant strain and the susceptible strain.
- Published
- 2020