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      The Management of Insect Pests in Australian Cotton: An Evolving Story

      1 , 1 , 2
      Annual Review of Entomology
      Annual Reviews

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          Fitness costs associated with insecticide resistance.

          Insects are exposed to a variety of stress factors in their environment, and, in many cases for insect pests to agriculture, those factors include toxic chemical insecticides. Coping with the toxicity of insecticides can be costly and requires energy and resource allocation for adaptation and survival. Several behavioural, physiological and genetic mechanisms are used by insects to handle toxic insecticides, sometimes leading to resistance by constitutive overexpression of detoxification enzymes or inducing mutations in the target sites. Such actions are costly and may affect reproduction, impair dispersal ability and have several other effects on the insect's fitness. Fitness costs resulting from resistance to insecticides has been reported in many insects from different orders, and several examples are given in this mini-review. Copyright © 2012 Society of Chemical Industry.
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            A total system approach to sustainable pest management

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              A perspective on management of Helicoverpa armigera: transgenic Bt cotton, IPM, and landscapes.

              Helicoverpa armigera is a major pest of agriculture, horticulture and floriculture throughout the Old World and recently invaded parts of the New World. We overview of the evolution in thinking about the application of area-wide approaches to assist with its control by the Australian Cotton Industry to highlight important lessons and future challenges to achieving the same in the New World. An over-reliance of broad-spectrum insecticides led to Helicoverpa spp. in Australian cotton rapidly became resistant to DDT, synthetic pyrethroids, organophosphates, carbamates and endosulfan. Voluntary strategies were developed to slow the development of insecticide resistance, which included rotating chemistries and basing spray decisions on thresholds. Despite adoption of these practices, insecticide resistance continued to develop until the introduction of genetically modified cotton provided a platform for augmenting Integrated Pest Management in the Australian cotton industry. Compliance with mandatory resistance management plans for Bt cotton necessitated a shift from pest control at the level of individual fields or farms towards a coordinated area-wide landscape approach. Our take-home message for control of H. armigera is that resistance management is essential in genetically modified crops and must be season long and area-wide to be effective. © 2016 Society of Chemical Industry.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annual Review of Entomology
                Annu. Rev. Entomol.
                Annual Reviews
                0066-4170
                1545-4487
                January 07 2018
                January 07 2018
                : 63
                : 1
                : 215-237
                Affiliations
                [1 ]CSIRO Agriculture and Food, Narrabri, New South Wales 2390, Australia;
                [2 ]New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Narellan, New South Wales 2567, Australia;
                Article
                10.1146/annurev-ento-020117-043432
                29324044
                634ae676-affe-4620-ae0e-08939dfc80b4
                © 2018
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