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Comparing the impact of conventional pesticide and use of a transgenic pest-resistant crop on the beneficial carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius

Mulligan, E; Ferry, N; Jouanin, L; Walters, K; Port, G; Gatehouse, A

Authors

E Mulligan

L Jouanin

K Walters

G Port

A Gatehouse



Abstract

The potential impact of a chemical pesticide control method has been compared with that of transgenic plants expressing a protease inhibitor conferring insect resistance by utilising a tritrophic system comprising the crop plant Brassica napus (L.) (Oilseed rape), the pest mollusc Deroceras reticulatum (Müller) and the predatory carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius (Illiger). Cypermethrin, as the most widely used pesticide in UK oilseed rape (OSR) cultivation, was selected as the conventional treatment. OSR expressing a cysteine protease inhibitor, oryzacystatin-1 (OC-1), was the transgenic comparator. In feeding trials, D. reticulatum showed no significant long-term effects on measured life history parameters (survival, weight gain, food consumption) as a result of exposure to either the cypermethrin or OC-1 treatment. However, D. reticulatum was able to respond to the presence of the dietary inhibitor by producing two novel proteases following exposure to OC-1-expressing OSR. Similarly, P. melanarius showed no detectable alterations in mortality, weight gain or food consumption when feeding on D. reticulatum previously fed either pesticide-contaminated or GM plant material. Furthermore, as with the slug, a novel form of protease, approximately M(r) 27 kDa, was induced in the carabid in response to feeding on slugs fed OC-1-expressing OSR.

Citation

Mulligan, E., Ferry, N., Jouanin, L., Walters, K., Port, G., & Gatehouse, A. (2006). Comparing the impact of conventional pesticide and use of a transgenic pest-resistant crop on the beneficial carabid beetle Pterostichus melanarius. Pest Management Science, 62(10), 999-1012. https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.1276

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2006
Deposit Date Oct 6, 2011
Journal Pest management science
Print ISSN 1526-498X
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 62
Issue 10
Pages 999-1012
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.1276
Keywords Oryzacystatin-1 (OC-1), cypermethrin, beneficial predators, carabid, transgenic oil seed rape, tritrophic interactions
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ps.1276