Genre
- Journal Article
A description is given of an axenic laboratory method for rearing Choristoneura fumiferana larvae that is suitable for physiological studies. The rearing procedure is a modification of the method of D. G. Grisdale (1984), using a wheat-germ based synthetic diet. The axenic rearing method resulted in a larval survival rate, defined as the number of 2nd-instar larvae that survived to the 6th instar (90.9+or-3.4% compared with a larval survival rate of 40.4+or-13.3% obtained by the unmodified method of Grisdale). The survival rate of 6th-instar larvae to the adult stage was about 98% using the axenic method. The development times for larvae using the axenic procedure were 4 days for 2nd-, 3rd- and 4th-instar larvae, 5 days for 5th-instar larvae and 7 (male) or 10 (female) for 6th-instar larvae. These values are in agreement with those reported for larvae reared by the Grisdale method, but a greater degree of development synchrony among larvae was obtained by the modified technique..
Department of Biology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Nfld. A1B 3X9, Canada.
RE: 9 ref.; SC: CA; TR; PE; CR; 0E; 6T
Source type: Electronic(1)
Language
- English
Subjects
- Choristoneura
- Pests Pathogens and Biogenic Diseases of Plants
- Insects
- animals
- Cyperales
- Triticum
- rearing techniques
- Tortricidae
- Development
- Choristoneura fumiferana
- wheat
- Trees
- monocotyledons
- Techniques and Methodology
- plants
- Spermatophyta
- Wheat germ
- Forests and Forest Trees Biology and Ecology
- techniques
- Insect pests
- Poaceae
- arthropods
- forest pests
- agricultural entomology
- Synthetic diets
- diets
- Lepidoptera
- angiosperms
- invertebrates