Journal ArticleUnknown
Phosphine Resistance in <I>Tribolium castaneum</I> and <I>Rhyzopertha dominica</I> From Stored Wheat in Oklahoma
Author Affiliations
Oklahoma State University, University of Rajshahi
Published InJournal of Economic Entomology
Year2012
Citations284
Abstract
Phosphine gas, or hydrogen phosphide (PH3), is the most common insecticide applied to durable stored products worldwide and is routinely used in the United States for treatment of bulk-stored cereal grains and other durable stored products. Research from the late 1980s revealed low frequencies of resistance to various residual grain protectant insecticides and to phosphine in grain insect species collected in Oklahoma. The present work, which used the same previously established discriminating dose bioassays for phosphine toxicity as in the earlier study, evaluated adults of nine different populations of red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum (Herbst), and five populations of lesser grain borer, Rhyzopertha dominica (F.) collected from different geographic locations in Oklahoma. One additional population for each species was a…
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