| Literature DB >> 35886812 |
Jinyu Zhao1, Chengfei Song1, Li Ma1, Xizhong Yan1, Juan Shi2, Chi Hao1.
Abstract
The Indian meal moth Plodia interpunctella (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) is a notorious stored-grain pest that can be found in most parts of China. The corpses, excretions, and other secretions of P. interpunctella larvae cause serious grain pollution, seriously affecting the nutritional and economic value of stored grain in China. To elucidate the potential distribution of P. interpunctella in China, we used the CLIMEX 4.0 model to project the potential distribution of the pest using historical climate data (1960-1990) and estimated future climate data (2030, 2050, and 2070). Under the historical climate situation, P. interpunctella was distributed in most areas of China, and its highly favorable habitats account for 48.14% of its total potential distribution. Because of temperature change in the future climate, suitable habitats will increase in the eastern part of Qinghai and will decrease in the mid-eastern, northeastern, and southeastern parts of China. Under these scenarios, the area of this pest's highly favorable habitat will be reduced by 1.24 million km2, and its proportion will decrease to about 28.48%. These predicted outcomes will help to distinguish the impact of climate change on the potential distribution of P. interpunctella, thereby providing important information to design early forecasting and strategies to prevent pest harm to stored grain.Entities:
Keywords: CLIMEX; Plodia interpunctella; climate change; potential distribution; prediction
Year: 2022 PMID: 35886812 PMCID: PMC9318193 DOI: 10.3390/insects13070636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 3.139
CLIMEX parameter values used for P. interpunctella modelling.
| CLIMEX Parameters | Values | Unit | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | |||
| DV0 | Starting temperature | 12.5 | °C |
| DV1 | Lower optimal temperature | 20 | °C |
| DV2 | Upper optimal temperature | 30 | °C |
| DV3 | Upper temperature threshold | 35 | °C |
| PDD | Degree days to complete one generation | 461 | °C days |
| Moisture | |||
| SM0 | Lower soil moisture threshold | 0.05 | |
| SM1 | Lower optimal soil moisture | 0.2 | |
| SM2 | Upper optimal soil moisture | 0.8 | |
| SM3 | Upper soil moisture threshold | 1.5 | |
| Heat stress | |||
| TTHS | Heat stress temperature threshold | 35 | °C |
| THHS | Heat stress temperature rate | 0.0048 | Week−1 |
| Cold stress | |||
| TTCS | Cold stress temperature threshold | −12.2 | °C |
| THCS | Cold stress temperature rate | −0.0003 | Week−1 |
| Dry stress | |||
| SMDS | Dry stress threshold | 0.05 | |
| HDS | Dry stress rate | −0.005 | Week−1 |
| Wet stress | |||
| SMWS | Wet stress threshold | 1.5 | |
| HWS | Wet stress rate | 0.002 | Week−1 |
Figure 1Potential distribution of P. interpunctella in China under historical climate conditions (1960–1990).
Figure 2Potential distribution of P. interpunctella in China under future climate conditions (2030, 2050, 2070).
Figure 3Area percentage changes in different ranges for the suitable distribution for P. interpunctella under current and future climate conditions in six major agricultural provinces of China.
Figure 4The percentages of various habitats during different periods and their trendlines in the total distribution area of P. interpunctella in China.
Figure 5The change in the EI values on interpolation maps for P. interpunctella under current and future climate conditions. Red represents the increase in EI values and blue indicates the decrease in EI values. The color becomes darker as the difference in the EI value increases.
Figure 6Average EI values of the different potential distributions of habitats under different periods. (right Y-axes: red = highly favorable habitats; upper left Y-axes: pink = favorable habitat; bottom left Y-axes: blue = marginally favorable habitats).