Environmental Entomology (1994) 23, 1061-1065

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Melaku Girma, Gerald E. Wilde, John C. Reese and Elaine A. Backus (1994)
Committed phloem ingestion of aphids (Homoptera: Aphididae): Difficulties in its application to host-plant resistance studies
Environmental Entomology 23 (5), 1061-1065
Abstract: The application of the concept of committed phloem ingestion (CPI) of aphids was studied for different aphid species feeding on resistant and susceptible plants. Greenbugs, Schizaphis graminum (Rondani) (biotype E), were monitored electronically on wheat, Triticum aestivum L., and Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench, cultivars, and Russian wheat aphids, Diuraphis noxia Mordvilko, were monitored on wheat cultivars. The duration of phloem ingestion (PI) events of these aphids was not randomly distributed and ~53% of them were <60 min in duration. The minimum PI duration to be considered as committed feeding (threshold of CPI) was determined for each aphid-host combination. Thresholds varied depending on the aphid species and host plants, indicating the difficulty of assigning a single threshold value that could be useful as a measure of host acceptability. Also, if a given threshold duration is chosen as a criterion for having achieved CPI (e.g., 15 min), the proportion of PI events that continues for a long time period varies from host to host. Therefore, we recommend that use of this parameter be discontinued, and that measurements of the time from the beginning of the experiment to PI and the time from the initiation of a probe to PI be substituted for time to first CPI.
(The abstract is excluded from the Creative Commons licence and has been copied with permission by the publisher.)
Database assignments for author(s): Elaine A. Backus

Research topic(s) for pests/diseases/weeds:
general biology - morphology - evolution


Pest and/or beneficial records:

Beneficial Pest/Disease/Weed Crop/Product Country Quarant.


Diuraphis noxia Wheat (Triticum)
Schizaphis graminum Wheat (Triticum)
Schizaphis graminum Sorghum (crop)