| Literature DB >> 31744107 |
David Maxwell Suckling1,2,3, Massimo Cristofaro4,5, Gerardo Roselli3,5,6, Mary Claire Levy5,7, Alessia Cemmi4, Valerio Mazzoni8, Lloyd Damian Stringer1, Valeria Zeni8, Claudio Ioriatti3, Gianfranco Anfora6,8.
Abstract
The sterility of eggs and nymphs from gamma-irradiated male Halyomorpha halys was investigated to determine the potential for the sterile insect technique (SIT). Males irradiated at 0, 16, 24 and 32 Gy were placed with untreated virgin females, and egg sterility was determined, showing 54.3% at 16 Gy. The percentage of sterility from irradiation was 26 percent lower than previous results from the USA and the variance was very high. Competitive overflooding ratio trials between irradiated virgin males and fertile virgin males at a 5:1 ratio resulted in the expected egg sterility, indicating competitive performance by irradiated males. By July and August, older, irradiated overwintered males were significantly less competitive than similar, non-irradiated males. There is a need to revisit the irradiation delivery method to achieve proper precision around the paternal dose required for an expected >80% egg sterility and subsequent ~99% endpoint sterility estimated at adult emergence in the F1 phase. These results suggest that the mating competitiveness and competency of males after irradiation at 16 Gy is not limiting to the sterile insect technique for suppression. A wild harvest of overwintering males using the aggregation pheromone, followed by irradiation and male release, might replace rearing. Mass-collected, sterilized bugs could be transported from an area of high H. halys density and shipped for release to enable suppression or eradication elsewhere. This concept is under development but further work is needed now to understand the difference in results between the US and Italian irradiators and increase the reliability of dosimetry.Entities:
Keywords: Halyomorpha halys; SIT; irradiation; sterile insect technique; sterility; stink bug; suppression; wild harvest
Year: 2019 PMID: 31744107 PMCID: PMC6920841 DOI: 10.3390/insects10110411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1Eggs of Halyomorpha halys with a normal complement of hatched nymphs (A), and those after male parental irradiation at 16 Gy, with a number of undeveloped, sterile (clear) eggs (B).
Figure 2Hatch rate of individual batches of eggs from crosses between irradiated (16, 24 or 32 Gy) or untreated males (0 Gy) mated with virgin females of Halyomorpha halys; larger symbols show the mean for each dose.
Hatch rate of all batches of eggs from crosses between irradiated (16, 24 or 32 Gy) or untreated males mated with virgin female Halyomorpha halys. Eggs per batch have 95% confidence limits. Percentage hatch was corrected after Abbott [29].
| Gy | Batches | Eggs Per Batch | Eggs Laid | Hatched | Percentage Hatch | Corrected Hatch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 58 | 26 (25–27) | 1480 | 1360 | 92% | |
| 16 | 53 | 25 (23–26) | 1319 | 664 | 50% | 54.4% |
| 24 | 36 | 26 (24–28) | 853 | 287 | 34% | 37.0% |
| 32 | 36 | 24 (22–26) | 871 | 231 | 27% | 29.4% |
Figure 3(A) Halyomorpha halys egg hatch over time as a function of overflooding with a five-to-one ratio of sterile to untreated virgin males (filled grey centre), compared with presumptively fully-sterile × virgin crosses (thin bordered square) and untreated controls (solid bordered square), with 15 virgin females per cage. The line shows the average fertility (54%) for parental male irradiation at 16 Gy. The results on the right (B) are from Experiment 2 (Figure 2), showing the spread of egg hatch values from 0 and 16 Gy treatments.
The effect of male irradiation on Halyomorpha halys egg hatch from five-to-one ratios of irradiated (ir, 16 Gy) and untreated virgin male parents placed with five virgin females, compared with untreated controls and overwintered males with the same treatments.
| Treatment | Male Type | Egg Status | Number of Batches | Total Eggs | Observed Hatch | Expected Hatch |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Virgin males (5:1) | ||||||||
| 16 Gy | 5 ir males:1 male:5 virgin females | Laid | 21 | 557 | 42% | 62% 1 | 96.2 | <0.0001 |
| Hatched | 233 | |||||||
| Control | 5 males:5 virgin females | Laid | 4 | 72 | 85% | 100% | ||
| Hatched | 61 | |||||||
| Overwintered males (5:1) | ||||||||
| 16 Gy | 5 ir males:1 male:5 virgin females | Laid | 26 | 447 | 61% 2 | 62% 1 | 0.09 | 0.75 |
| Hatched | 274 | |||||||
| Control | 5 males:5 virgin females | Laid | 14 | 295 | 94% | 100% | ||
| Hatched | 277 | |||||||
1Table 1 provides the estimate of a 54% hatch for 16 Gy irradiated male parents, which rises to a 62% expected hatch with a 5:1 release rate of sterile:wild insects (5/6 × 54% + 1/6 × 100%). 2 Significantly different than observed for virgin males at 16 Gy above, p < 0.001.
Hatch of Halyomorpha halys eggs from oviposition after caging with five-to-one ratios of irradiated (ir, 16 Gy) and untreated virgin male parents placed with five virgin females, compared to untreated controls and undiluted irradiated males (expected values from Table 2).
| Treatment Using Virgin Males and Females | Number of Batches | Total Eggs | Eggs Hatched | Observed Hatch % | Expected Hatch % |
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 ir males:1 male:5 females | 18 | 398 | 207 | 52.0 | 62 1 | 16.86 | 0.0001 |
| 5 ir males:5 females | 15 | 373 | 148 | 39.7 | 54 2 | 30.80 | 0.0001 |
| 5 males:5 females | 33 | 794 | 646 | 81.4 | 100 |
1Table 2: 5/6 × 54% + 1/6 × 100%, control mortality not included; 2 Table 1.