Abstract
Euschistus heros (Fabricius) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) primarily attack the pods and seeds of soybean plants, causing severe economic losses in Neotropical Region, and chemical control is essential to avoid these losses. Thus, insecticides more effective against this pest and less toxic to Telenomus podisi Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) - the main biological control agent of E. heros - should be used. In this report, we studied the differential acute impacts of pesticides used in Brazilian soybean against E. heros and T. podisi and evaluated their sublethal effects on the parasitoid to identify effective pesticides towards the pest with less harmful effect to the natural enemy. The LC50 of the insecticides to E. heros ranged from 1.20 to 533.74 ng a.i./cm2; the order of toxicity was thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin > acetamiprid + fenpropathrin > zeta-cypermethrin > acephate > imidacloprid. All pesticides were classified as slightly to moderately toxic to T. podisi based on the risk quotient. The exposure of T. podisi females to imidacloprid and the insecticide pre-formulated mixtures reduced the emergence of the offspring parasitoids by up to 40% whereas zeta-cypermethrin and the insecticides pre-formulated mixtures reduced offspring survival. The preferred order of choice of insecticides for the management of E. heros according to agronomic, toxicological, and environmental feasibility was the following: thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin > zeta-cypermethrin > acetamiprid + fenpropathrin > acephate > imidacloprid. Our study provides important and pioneer information to select insecticides for effective control of E. heros with lower impacts on T. podisi.
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Introduction
Soybean (Glycine max L.) (Fabaceae: Phaseoleae) is one of the most economically important leguminous crops worldwide. Brazil is the world’s second-largest producer of soybeans with an estimated production of 115 million tons in the harvest season 2017/18, with USD 32.4 billion in soybean exports1. However, the potential productivity of soybeans is usually limited by the occurrence of pest insects during the crop season.
Among the several pests infesting soybeans, the stink bugs are of high relevance due to their high population levels and direct feeding on grains and pods, which can transmit diseases, reducing seed quality2. The brown stink bug, Euschistus heros (Fabricius) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae), is the most abundant and prevalent stink bug in soybean of Neotropical Region3. Insect populations are managed by frequent spraying of insecticides, and in many situations, the chemical control is the only method capable of effectively avoid economic losses4.
The management of E. heros is based on broad-spectrum insecticides, including organophosphates, pyrethroids, and neonicotinoids5, without considering the economic threshold and/or using pesticides tank mixtures3. As a result, intensive spraying of insecticides causes several problems, including increased residues in food products, intoxication of users, occurrence of resistant insect populations, resurgence and imbalance of beneficial insects that serve as natural enemies6,7,8,9. Therefore, the sustainability of soybean crops depends on the development of less hazardous pest management strategies, including biological control and the use of selective agrochemicals10,11.
The egg parasitoids of the Platygastridae family are considered the main natural enemies of stink bugs pests (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) in different crops12,13,14,15,16. Parasitoids of stink bugs eggs have been used in 0.03 million hectares of soybean crops in South America in augmentative biological control programs17. Telenomus podisi Ashmead (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) is the most efficient parasitoid of E. heros and Piezodorus guildinii (Westwood) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) eggs18, insects which cause the highest economic losses to soybean crops in Brazil19. In Brazil, T. podisi is found from the Midwest20 to the extreme South Regions21.
Although biological control is essential for Integrated Pest Management (IPM) by maintaining pest populations below economic threshold levels, chemical control in many circumstances is necessary for effective management of stink bugs and other harmful organisms22 present simultaneously in soybean crops. Therefore, the choice of chemicals for pest control in IPM programs should not be based only on the agronomic efficiency (e.g. efficiency in pest control) of the products but also on the lowest impact over the pest natural enemies (e.g. selective pesticide)23. To date, information on pesticide selectivity has been disregarded when choosing chemicals to pests control in Brazil, because this information is not easily available to farmers24, such as on package leaflet or product labels or even on online pesticides database of the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture and Food Supply24,25. This situation has become even more worrying since Brazil is one of the world leaders in agrochemicals use26.
Assessment of the acute toxicity of pesticides towards beneficial arthropods traditionally has relied on the determination of an acute median lethal dose or lethal concentration27. Previous studies evaluated the differential acute toxicity of pesticides against the target pests and their natural enemies in different crops with the aim of choosing a pesticide with a high degree of lethal toxicity on pests and minimal non-target lethal toxicity28,29,30. In addition to direct pesticide-induced mortality, the sublethal effects must be considered for a complete impact analysis, helping pesticide choice for IPM31,32. However, to the best of our knowledge, no studies to date compared the acute toxicity of pesticides on E. heros and its main biocontrol agent T. podisi and the sublethal effects on this egg parasitoid. Thus, the aim of this research was to know the differential impacts of pesticides frequently used in soybean crops in Brazil to the brown stink bug E. heros and its main parasitoid T. podisi, and determine the sublethal effects on the parasitoid. Once this data were available, we could select those insecticides that were most effective in controlling the pest and with lowest toxicity to the natural enemy.
Results
The median lethal concentration (LC50) values for acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin after exposure in glass vials were significantly different between E. heros and T. podisi (Table 1). For E. heros, the LC50 values range from 1.20 to 533.74 ng of a.i. per cm2. The order of acute toxicity (from highest to lowest) was thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin > acetamiprid + fenpropathrin > zeta-cypermethrin > acephate > imidacloprid (LC50 values with overlaps in the 95% confidence intervals were classified as having the same level of toxicity) (Table 1).
The LC50 values for T. podisi ranged from 0.69 to 57.43 ng of a.i. per cm2, and the order of acute toxicity (from highest to lowest) was thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin > imidacloprid > acetamiprid + fenpropathrin > zeta-cypermethrin > acephate (LC50 values with overlaps in the 95% confidence intervals were classified as having the same level of toxicity) (Table 1).
The risk quotient-based classification (RQ) is shown in Table 2. Acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin were classified as slightly to moderately toxic to T. podisi (50 < RQ ≤ 2500), with values ranging from 79.55 and 1646.67.
T. podisi females exposed to the LC50 of acephate, imidacloprid, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin showed significantly decreased in the percentage of parasitized eggs, by up to 13.42% (H = 22.49, df = 5, P = 0.0004) (Table 3). Zeta-cypermethrin did not significantly affect egg parasitism compared to the control treatment. However, all pesticides were classified as harmless according to IOBC classes (E < 30%) to egg parasitism by T. podisi (Table 3). In contrast, the development of the progeny (F1) of T. podisi was significantly affected by the insecticides (H = 17.11, df = 5, P = 0.0004) (Table 3). Imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin significantly reduced offspring emergence, whereas acephate did not significantly affect emergence compared to the control treatment. Imidacloprid, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin were classified as slightly harmful (class 2) (30% ≤ E ≤ 79%), with a reduction in adult emergence of up to 40%, whereas acephate and zeta-cypermethrin were classified as harmless (class 1) (E < 30%). However, the insecticides did not significantly reduce the percentage of formed males and females compared with the control treatment (H = 31.46, df = 5, P = 0.06) (Table 3).
The survival of T. podisi adults originated from females exposed to LC50 of acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin was significantly affected (Kaplan-Meier Log-Rank = 68.36, df = 5, P =< 0.0001), being observed a decrease of up to 35% compared to the control (Fig. 1). The mean survival of adults (F1) was 23.45, 24.01, 21.80, 20.12, and 21.30 days for acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin, respectively. The mean survival in the control group was 30.96 and did not differ significantly from that of acephate and imidacloprid (Fig. 1).
Based on the degree of agronomic, toxicological, and environmental suitability (DA), thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin was considered the most suitable pesticide to control the brown stink bug (Table 4). The DA order (from highest to lowest) was thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin > zeta-cypermethrin > acetamiprid + fenpropathrin > acephate > imidacloprid.
Discussion
The brown stink bug is one the predominant insect pests in Brazilian soybean crops6 and therefore demands high insecticide applications in attempt to regulate population level on the field. These insecticides contain several active ingredients, formulated commercially in isolation or mixtures, presenting different control efficiencies. In this study, E. heros adults were more susceptible to the residual toxic effects of neonicotinoids and pyrethroids formulated in mixtures, including thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin and acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, with LC50 values of approximately 72, 318, and 445, 2.5, 11, and 15-fold lower than those of zeta-cypermethrin (pyrethroid), acephate (organophosphate), and imidacloprid (neonicotinoid), respectively.
Farmers and phytosanitary managers often prefer to control pest insects in different crops with the same application in tank mixtures33 or mixtures of two active ingredients34. Spray mixture formulations are registered and currently used to control the brown stink bug in Brazilian soybean crops25,35. These pre-mixtures allow a broader spectrum of action, targeting different toxicological sites in the pest. This is due the characteristic of the active ingredients in these mixtures that usually contain a neonicotinoid - systemic in the plant - which acts in the insect mainly by plant tissues/sap ingestion, plus a pyrethroid, which mainly acts by contact. Recent efficiency assays in E. heros demonstrated a stronger acute effect of commercially formulated neonicotinoids and pyrethroids in mixtures within 14 days after application compared to isolated pesticides such as acephate, zeta-cypermethrin, and imidacloprid36.
It is worth highlighting that the concentrations recommended to control E. heros in the field (ng a.i./cm2) are approximately 20, 2, 8, 26, and 409 times higher than the LC50 (ng a.i./cm2) of acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin, respectively (Supplementary Fig. S1). These results indicate that, in addition to the lower levels necessary to kill 50% of the stink bug population using acetamiprid + fenpropathrin and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin, the registered concentrations of these insecticides in the field are much higher than the respective LC50 obtained in this study, suggesting the increased safety for the more effective control of E. heros.
The successful integration of biological and chemical control strategies into an IPM program requires knowledge of the effects of pesticides on beneficial arthropods23. For this purpose, several approaches may be used to study the impact of pesticides on natural enemies, including contact exposure or ingestion of toxins using lethal or sublethal doses and field studies to evaluate changes in populations of beneficial insects in response to agrochemical applications37.
The results of this study indicated that acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin were toxic to T. podisi. Organophosphates, neonicotinoids, and pyrethroids impair the synaptic transmission of nerve impulses and axonal neurotransmission by blocking sodium channels, respectively38. Neurotoxic insecticides act to a similar extent on different animal phyla, including pest insects and their natural enemies. Therefore, these compounds are more aggressive against egg parasitoids Telenomus spp. in different agroecosystems7,39,40,41. Neonicotinoids, pyrethroids and their mixtures presented a lower selectivity to T. podisi. Similar results were obtained by Turchen et al.41 and in studies involving the biological control agents Diadegma spp. (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) and Telenomus remus Nixon (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae)39,42.
Adult parasitoids may be directly exposed to insecticide droplets during spraying or indirectly by toxic residues on the plant canopy, water droplets, nectar, or honeydew43, and are more sensitive to the effects of pesticides than the immature stages because the embryo is protected by the egg chorion during insect development44. Therefore, the RQ was used for the first time to evaluate the ecological risk of insecticide used to control E. heros over the its natural enemy T. podisi. The RQ is an important measure of risk to natural enemies under field conditions because it also considers the recommended field rate for target pest control45. RQ has been used to evaluate the safety of predators and parasitoids in different agroecosystems46,47,48,49.
The analysis of the RQ in this study indicated that none of the evaluated pesticides was considered harmless (RQ < 50) to T. podisi, although the RQ for zeta-cypermethrin approached 50 and was approximately 4, 19, 5, and 20 times lower than that of acephate, imidacloprid, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin, respectively. Acephate and other organophosphates presented a high risk of toxicity to Trichogramma spp.46,48,50,51. Similarly, neonicotinoids, including imidacloprid and thiamethoxam, were toxic to egg parasitoids27,46. Therefore, the use of these insecticides in IPM programs should be carefully evaluated42,52.
The exposure of T. podisi to lethal or sublethal doses of pesticides allows the determination of the chemical and biological compatibility and the effect of insecticides on the natural enemies31. Beneficial arthropods surviving insecticide exposure may be mildly or severely affected, manifested in individual biological changes and offspring survival (parasitism rate, adult emergence, longevity/survival, sex ratio), and behavioral characteristics31,53.
The exposure to LC50 decreased, albeit to a small extent, the percentage of host eggs parasitized by T. podisi. Previous studies reported significant impairment of parasitism by Telenomus spp. and Trichogramma spp. exposed to toxic residues at the recommended concentrations of acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin, and other organophosphorus pesticides, pyrethroids, and neonicotinoids commercially formulated in isolation or mixtures7,9,11,22,39,41,45,46,47,54,55.
The exposure of T. podisi females from the maternal generation to insecticides may impair their offspring53. In our study, imidacloprid, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin significantly reduced the emergence of offspring of exposed females (Supplementary Fig. S2). In contrast, Bayram et al.40 evaluated the toxicity of sublethal doses (CL25) of the pyrethroids deltamethrin and cyfluthrin to the progeny of females of Telenomus busseolae Gahan (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) and found no detrimental effects on insect emergence. However, studies with parasitoids of the Platygastridae family indicated that insects emergence decreased when immature stages were exposed to pesticides41,44. It is of note that our results do not allow determining whether the reduction in insect emergence is due to the direct effects of pesticides or the occurrence of other dysfunctions such as organ malformation31.
Sohrabi et al.56 pointed out that it is vital to consider the fitness of emerging parasitoids. In our study, the survival of the offspring of females exposed to the LC50 of zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin was significantly reduced. The effect of insecticides on the parasitoid longevity will depend on the type of insecticide, parasitoid species, and the mode of insecticide application40. For instance, these reductions in longevity are commonly observed in parasitoids emerged from eggs exposed to pesticides while developing inside the host32,57. However, Beserra and Parra53 found no significant changes in the longevity of F1 females of Trichogramma pretiosum Riley (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) developing in eggs of Anagasta kuehniella (Zeller) (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) treated with lambda-cyhalothrin in the larval, pre-pupal, and pupal stages of the parasitoid. Until now, to the best of our knowledge, there are no available studies on changes in the biological characteristics of Platygastridae egg parasitoids, including offspring longevity, as a consequence of the exposure of maternal females to sublethal pesticides concentrations.
Agrochemicals products can also cause changes in the sex ratio of beneficial insects31. For instance, the organophosphorus insecticide chlorpyrifos modified the sex ratio of the offspring of several Hymenoptera parasitoid58,59, whereas imidacloprid significantly changed the sex ratio of the progeny of Encarsia inaron Walker (Hymenoptera: Aphelinidae) by increasing the number of male offspring56. However, these authors did not determine the mechanisms underlying the change in the sex ratio of beneficial arthropods caused by insecticides. In the present study, the proportion of F1 females remained high in all treatments, and these results are similar to those obtained in a study that determined the rate of parasitism of E. heros eggs by T. podisi in vitro60.
Bueno et al.23 recently performed a research review about the challenges, limitations and field recommendations on the selectivity of pesticides to natural enemies, and reported that considering the populations dynamics of insects and other pests and the frequent introduction of new chemical compounds for pest management, farmers need complete information on pesticides that could effectively control target pests with minimal impact on the agroecosystem and related agents to continually adjust their IPM routines. In this research, DA was studied for acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin in order to support the choice of the most appropriate insecticide in an integrated management program for E. heros. This method was proposed by Martins et al.24 for pesticides registered in rice, corn, and soybean crops in Southern Brazil. The strong lethal effect of thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin against E. heros, with a moderate classification by RQ and sublethal effects on T. podisi, together with the toxicological class of the commercial product (Table 5), made this insecticide more suitable for pest management.
It is also worth pointing out that all variables of DA calculation consider the acute toxicity of the pesticides to a pest insect and its natural enemy, because this is essential for practical field applications in order to select the most environment-friendly and less detrimental chemical for pest management. Since the acute toxicity of acephate, imidacloprid, zeta-cypermethrin, acetamiprid + fenpropathrin, and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin was high for T. podisi, these insecticides should be used for the control of E. heros only in population densities causing economic losses to soybean. Furthermore, future researches to evaluate pesticides sprayed on plant surface and their systemic properties, routes of exposure, metabolism, long-term effects, such as chronic toxicity, bioaccumulation, and bio-magnification can be considered to improve the indication of pesticides for pest management. Even so, in the context of the soybean IPM, the informations obtained in this research are relevant and pioneer in the field of identifying preferred insecticides for the effective control of E. heros and the preservation of non-target organisms in the soybean agroecosystem.
Methods
Insects
The E. heros colony, originated from adults collected in soybean crop (27°48′1.7352′S, 52°54′3.834″W) in the year 2015, was established by mass rearing in the laboratory [temperature: 25 ± 1 °C; RH: 70 ± 10%; photoperiod: 14:10 (L:D)]61. The T. podisi colony was obtained from “BUG Brasil Agentes Biológicos©” and reared in the laboratory [temperature: 25 ± 1 °C; RH: 70 ± 10%; photoperiod: 14:10 (L: D)]62.
Insecticides
Five commercial formulations of insecticides registered for the control of E. heros in soybean crop25 and widely used for managing pentatomids in crop36 (Table 5) were used.
Acute toxicity bioassays
The method using glass vial, initially developed to assess the susceptibility of Lygus lineolaris (Palisot de Beauvois) (Hemiptera: Miridae) and E. heros63,64,65 to contact insecticides, with slight modifications, was used in insecticide toxicity bioassays for E. heros and T. podisi in the laboratory [temperature: 25 ± 1 °C; RH: 70 ± 10%; photoperiod: 14:10 (L: D)].
The concentrations of each insecticide used in the assays were based on the level of active ingredient indicated in the package label of the formulations and were prepared in two phases. The first phase consisted of serial dilutions (1:10) of the insecticide stock concentration (1000 ng a.i./cm2) to obtain the range of doses causing mortality of 0 to 100%. In the second phase, seven to ten concentrations of each insecticide were prepared by sequential dilution in distilled water to obtain the concentration-response curves and the estimated median lethal concentration (LC50). Distilled water was used in the control treatment.
Toxicity to E. heros
The surface of each glass vial (2.4 cm in diameter × 8.0 cm in height = 64.84 cm2) was impregnated with 600 μL of each insecticide concentration (treatment). The following minimum and maximum concentrations (in ng a.i./cm2) were used: acephate (Orthene® SP) 46.27 to 9253.55; imidacloprid (Imidacloprid Nortox® SC) 0.46 to 9253.55; zeta-cypermethrin (Mustang® EC) 0.46 to 9253.55; acetamiprid + fenpropathrin (Bold® EW) 0.09 to 4626.77; and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin (Engeo™ Pleno SC) 0.09 to 9253.55. The vials treated were dried on a rotating equipment to ensure the uniformity of mix in the vials. Each treatment included five replicates, each with five pairs (male and female) of stink bugs adults aged ≤72 h.
After 4 h of treatment, the insects were removed from the vials and transferred to small plastic pots (7.0 cm in diameter and 8.5 cm in height) containing beans, soybeans and peanuts as food and water ad libitum supplied in 1.5-mL Eppendorf tubes covered with cotton. Insect mortality was evaluated at 24 h and 48 h after contact with the insecticides. The insects that did not move with a stimulus with a fine-tipped brush were considered dead.
Toxicity to T. podisi
The application and drying of the insecticides on the surface of the glass vials (1.0 cm in diameter and 8.0 cm in height = 25.91 cm2) were performed as described for the E. heros lethal toxicity bioassay. The following minimum and maximum insecticide concentrations (in ng a.i./cm2) were used: acephate (Orthene® SP) 2.32 to 1157.85; imidacloprid (Imidacloprid Nortox® SC) 0.23 to 23.16; zeta-cypermethrin (Mustang® EC) 0.23 to 231.57; acetamiprid + fenpropathrin (Bold® EW) 1.16 to 115.79; and thiamethoxam + lambda-cyhalothrin (Engeo™ Pleno SC) 0.23 to 23.16. Each treatment included five repetitions, each with five pairs (male and female) of parasitoid adults aged ≤48 h.
The parasitoids were removed from the vials after 4 h of treatment and transferred to glass vials (diameter of 2.4 cm and height of 8.0 cm) containing pure honey as food. Mortality was assessed at 24 and 48 h after insecticide exposure. The parasitoids that did not move when stimulated with a fine-tipped brush were considered dead.
Sublethal effects to T. podisi
The pairs of T. podisi were established and maintained for 24–36 h in glass vials (diameter of 2.4 cm and height of 8.0 cm) containing pure honey as food for mating. Subsequently, females (mated, fed, and without foraging experience with the host) were transferred to glass vials (diameter of 1.0 cm, height of 8.0 cm, surface area of 25.91 cm2) impregnated with insecticide (LC50) or distilled water (control treatment). Five repetitions with 20 females each were used.
After 4 h of treatment with the insecticides (LC50), the parasitoids were removed from the glass vials and transferred to another vials (diameter of 2.4 cm and height of 8.0 cm) containing pure honey as food. The mortality ratio was determined 24 and 48 h after contact with the pesticides. Twenty surviving females, randomly selected from each treatment, were transferred to glass vial of the same size containing pure honey as food and an egg mass (aged < 12 h) of E. heros (cards with approximately 25 eggs) to parasitize for 24 h. The egg cards were removed and individualized to measure the rate of eggs parasitized by the females (generation F0) exposed to insecticides (LC50), emergence rate, sex ratio and survival of adult parasitoids (F1 generation).
Statistical analysis and toxicity classification
The LC50 values, 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), and χ2 values were calculated by Probit analysis using the POLO Plus software (Leora Software, Berkeley, CA, USA). The LC50 values were compared for each species (E. heros and T. podisi) using the LC50 confidence intervals, being considered significantly different when these intervals did not overlap.
The risk quotients (RQ) of insecticides were calculated from the values of LC50 for T. podisi and the registered dose for the control of E. heros in soybean crop (Table 5), according to equation (1)46. QR values lower than 50 were considered harmless, values from 50 to 2500 were slightly to moderately toxic and values higher than 2500 were considered toxic or dangerous.
The effects of parasitoid exposure (LC50) on the rate of parasitized eggs, emergence rate and adult sex ratio (F1) were determined by the Kruskal-Wallis test with Dunn post hoc test (P < 0.05) using R® software66. The Kaplan-Meier estimators (Log-Rank method) were used to evaluate survival (days) of adult parasitoids (F1) and the survival curves were compared by the Holm-Sidak test (P < 0.05) using the software SigmaPlot version 12.3 (Systat Software, San Jose, CA, USA). In addition, descriptive analysis established by the International Organization for Biological and Integrated Control of Noxious Animals and Plants (IOBC) was conducted using equation (2) to classify the insecticides as follows: class 1: harmless (E < 30%); class 2: slightly harmful (30% ≤ E ≤ 79%); class 3: moderately harmful (80% ≤ E ≤ 99%); class 4: harmful (E > 99%)67.
where E is the percentage of reduction in parasitism or emergence, T is the mean rate of parasitism or emergence in the treatment groups, and C is the mean rate of parasitism or emergence in the control groups.
We elaborated an indication of the most adequate insecticides for the control of E. heros24. For this purpose, five variables were used, with different weights [W]: a) toxicity to E. heros [Wa = 4], based on the differences in LC50 (in ng of a.i. per cm2) for E. heros; b) toxicity to T. podisi based on RQ values36 [Wb1 = 1.5] and reduction of parasitism and emergence using IOBC criteria38 [Wb2 = 1.5]; c) toxicological class (package leaflet and insecticide label) [Wc = 1]; d) environmental class (package leaflet and insecticide label) [Wd = 1]; and e) safety interval (package leaflet and insecticide label) [We = 1]. For each item, the scores 1 (lower adequacy), 3, 5, or 7 (higher adequacy) were assigned descriptively. Furthermore, the weighted average indicative of the degree of adequacy (DA) of the commercial insecticide for the control of E. heros was calculated using equation (3).
where S is the score attributed to the toxicity of the pesticide to the pest (E. heros) multiplied by weight 4; Sb1 is the score attributed to the toxicity of the pesticide to the natural enemy (T. podisi) according to the RQ multiplied by weight 1.5; Sb2 is the score attributed to the toxicity of the pesticide to the natural enemy (T. podisi) according to the highest IOBC classification to reduce parasitism or emergence multiplied by weight 1.5; Sc is the score assigned to the toxicological class of the pesticide multiplied by weight 1; Sd is the score attributed to the environmental toxicological class of the pesticide multiplied by weight 1; Se is the score assigned to the safety interval of the pesticide multiplied by weight 1.
Ethical approval
This article does not contain any studies with human participants or vertebrate performed by any of the authors.
Data Availability
The authors declare no restrictions on the availability of materials or information.
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Acknowledgements
We thank to Dr. Mariane D’avila Rosenthal (Agronomic Engineer - UFPel/FAEM) for full assistance in mass rearing of insects in laboratory and financial supported by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq - Grand numbers: 140328/2016-5; 310407/2017-6) and Brazilian Federal Agency for the Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES).
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J.B.P., A.D.G., J.F.S.M. and M.J.Z. conceived research. D.C. and F.A.B. kept insects rearing. J.B.P., A.C.P., D.C., F.A.B. and M.R. conducted experiments. A.C.P. analyzed data. J.B.P., A.C.P. and D.C. wrote the manuscript. All authors read and approved the manuscript.
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Pazini, J.d.B., Padilha, A.C., Cagliari, D. et al. Differential impacts of pesticides on Euschistus heros (Hem.: Pentatomidae) and its parasitoid Telenomus podisi (Hym.: Platygastridae). Sci Rep 9, 6544 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-42975-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-42975-4
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