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Antixenosis and antibiosis mechanisms of resistance to Asian rice gall midge, Orseolia oryzae (Wood‐Mason) in rice land races.

Authors :
Sahu, Nandini
Gowda Gadratagi, Basana
Guru‐Pirasanna‐Pandi, Govindharaj
Patil, Naveenkumar B.
Basak, Nabaneeta
Rath, Prakash Chandra
Anilkumar, Chandrappa
Rath, Ladu Kishore
Source :
Annals of Applied Biology. Sep2024, Vol. 185 Issue 2, p183-194. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Asian rice gall midge is one of the important pests of rice, which attacks the crop from nursery to the end of the tillering stage. Managing this pest through plant resistance is the most viable and economical. Two hundred‐two rice genotypes were phenotyped against Asian rice gall midge, Orseolia oryzae (Wood‐Mason) and the mechanism of resistance in terms of antixenosis and antibiosis was studied. Antixenosis mechanism for adult settlement and egg laying indicated that the susceptible genotypes were preferred more than the resistant genotypes in a free choice test. First instar maggots were found and did not continue their growth on resistant genotypes further. However, in susceptible genotypes, they molted successfully and emerged as adults. No choice tests revealed that the emergence of adults in susceptible genotypes took less time than in resistant genotypes. Higher adult sex ratio was found in susceptible genotypes. Estimation of biochemical components in rice shoot apices of selected genotypes revealed that higher levels of total phenols, wax content, total flavonoids and total free amino acids were present in the resistant genotypes. Still, the number of total sugars, reducing sugars and total protein contents were significantly higher in the susceptible genotypes. Hence, the resistance mechanism in rice gall midge was displayed as a combination of antixenosis and antibiosis mechanism. The output of the study would be helpful in breeding for rice varieties resistant to Asian rice gall midge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00034746
Volume :
185
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Annals of Applied Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179320895
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/aab.12876