Cryomazine concentration and host type effects on the biology of the southern cowpea weevil Callosobruchus maculatus F.

Journal Article
المجلة \ الصحيفة: 
African Journal of Microbiology Research
رقم العدد: 
20
رقم الإصدار السنوي: 
5
الصفحات: 
3321-3326
مستخلص المنشور: 

In this study we investigated the effects of different cryomazine concentrations and host type on the biology  of  the  southern  cowpea  weevil  Callosobruchus  maculatus  F.  (Coleoptera:  Bruchidae).  Our results showed that increasing cryomazine concentration led to the increase in the average incubation period of eggs and low hatching rate, reaching the highest average of egg incubation period 13.25 days for  insects  reared  on  a  mung  beans  treated with cryomazine  concentration of  3  and  5%.  The  lowest average  for  incubation  period  reached  9.25  days  when  insects  reared  on  cowpea  treated  with  1% concentration of  cryomazine.  Insect  reared  on peas  treated  with  5%  cryomazine  concentration had  a lower  average  percentage  of  hatching  eggs,  1.25%  in comparison  with  the  control  (67.25%).  The maximum average rate of eggs hatching reached 55% of insects reared on mung beans treated with 1% cryomazine  concentration  compared  with  the  control  (75%).  High  cryomazine  concentration  reduced the percentage of pupation and adult emergence; theaverage percentage reached 19.83 and 27.08%, compared  with  the  control  87.33  and  88.5%  respectively. Thus,  increasing  cryomazine  concentration not only led to the increase in the average duration of larvae and pupae of insects bred to all nutritional hosts except peas where the insect was unable to complete its life cycle but also led to reduction in the 
percentage of pupation and adult emergence.