Weevil x Insecticide: Does 'Personality' Matter?

An insect's behavior is the expression of its integrated physiology in response to external and internal stimuli, turning insect behavior into a potential determinant of insecticide exposure. Behavioral traits may therefore influence insecticide efficacy against insects, compromising the validi...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-06, Vol.8 (6), p.e67283
Hauptverfasser: Morales, Juliana A, Cardoso, Danúbia G, Della Lucia, Terezinha Maria C, Guedes, Raul Narciso C
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creator Morales, Juliana A
Cardoso, Danúbia G
Della Lucia, Terezinha Maria C
Guedes, Raul Narciso C
description An insect's behavior is the expression of its integrated physiology in response to external and internal stimuli, turning insect behavior into a potential determinant of insecticide exposure. Behavioral traits may therefore influence insecticide efficacy against insects, compromising the validity of standard bioassays of insecticide activity, which are fundamentally based on lethality alone. By extension, insect 'personality' (i.e., an individual's integrated set of behavioral tendencies that is inferred from multiple empirical measures) may also be an important determinant of insecticide exposure and activity. This has yet to be considered because the behavioral studies involving insects and insecticides focus on populations rather than on individuals. Even among studies of animal 'personality', the relative contributions of individual and population variation are usually neglected. Here, we assessed behavioral traits (within the categories: activity, boldness/shyness, and exploration/avoidance) of individuals from 15 populations of the maize weevil (Sitophilus zeamais), an important stored-grain pest with serious problems of insecticide resistance, and correlated the behavioral responses with the activity of the insecticide deltamethrin. This analysis was performed at both the population and individual levels. There was significant variation in weevil 'personality' among individuals and populations, but variation among individuals within populations accounted for most of the observed variation (92.57%). This result emphasizes the importance of individual variation in behavioral and 'personality' studies. When the behavioral traits assessed were correlated with median lethal time (LT50) at the population level and with the survival time under insecticide exposure, activity traits, particularly the distance walked, significantly increased survival time. Therefore, behavioral traits are important components of insecticide efficacy, and individual variation should be considered in such studies. This is so because population differences provided only crude approximation of the individual personality in a restrained experimental setting likely to restrict individual behavior favoring the transposition of the individual variation to the population.
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subjects Agriculture
Agrochemicals
Animal behavior
Animals
Behavior, Animal - drug effects
Bioassays
Biological Assay
Biology
Corn
Deltamethrin
Empirical analysis
Exploration
Exposure
Grain
Insecticide Resistance
Insecticides
Insecticides - pharmacology
Insects
Lethality
Mitochondrial DNA
Nitriles - pharmacology
Personality
Pesticide resistance
Pesticides
Population
Populations
Pyrethrins - pharmacology
Sitophilus zeamais
Studies
Survival
Transposition
Tribolium confusum
Turning behavior
Variation
Weevils - drug effects
title Weevil x Insecticide: Does 'Personality' Matter?
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