This research examined the effects of the Cry1Ac toxin on the chrysopid predator Chrysoperla externa, fed Ashbya gossypii-aphids reared on cotton (Bt) NuOPAL and non-Bt DeltaOPAL (Bollgard TM) for two generations. Individual eggs from the predator were placed in glass containers, and hatched. Each treatment consisted of 20 replicates, each containing one insect. Larvae in treatment 1 were fed A. gossypii individuals reared on a diet of NuOPAL (Bt) cotton leaves. Larvae in treatment 2 were given aphids of the same species previously fed leaves of conventional DeltaOPAL cotton. The average duration of larval instars, pre-pupal and pupal phases from both treatments (Bt and non-Bt) and between generations were evaluated using the t test at 5% probability. The duration of the larval instars in treatment 2 was longer than in treatment 1, but these differences were significant only for the second and third instars. In the second generation, a significant difference in the duration of the first instar and the larval phase were observed. However, when comparing the data on the duration of the second instar, the first generation predators in treatment 1 had a shorter lifespan. The average viability was 96.29% for non-Bt treatment against 91.07% for individuals in the Bt treatment. The results of this study suggests that the biology and development of C. externa larvae fed aphids reared on Bt cotton leaves were not affected by the Bttoxin, possibly because these aphids do not accumulate the Bt-toxin.
Cultivation of Bt crops is an important tactic in integrated pest management. The effect of Bt maize on arthropod predators needs to be investigated because of the important role of these natural enemies in the absence of target pests. The objective of the present study was to generate information on the distribution model of Cycloneda sanguinea (L.) (Coleoptera: Coccinelidae) in Bt and non-Bt maize. A sampling field of 2.500 m 2 area, divided into 100 plots, was used in this study. Five plants per plot, totaling 500 plants in each field, were studied. We counted the total number of adults every week, totaling six samples for each field (Bt and non-Bt). The aggregation index (variance/mean ratio, Morisita index, and exponent k of the negative binomial distribution) and Chi-square fit of the observed and expected values to the theoretical frequency distribution (Poisson, binomial, and negative binomial positive) revealed that, in both cultivars, the adults of C. sanguinea were distributed according to the random distribution model, which fits the pattern of Poisson distribution.
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