DOI: 10.11606/t.11.1983.tde-20210104-192142
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Consumo e utilização de milho, trigo e sorgo por >i<Spodoptera frugiperda>/i< (J. E. Smith, 1797) (Lepidoptera - Noctuidae)

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Female pupal duration, significantly shorter than that of males, had already been reported for the same species whose larvae were fed on ryegrass (Foerster & Mello 1996), is related to protogyny, especially reported for the pupal stage of noctuids (Montezano et al 2013, 2014a, 2016; Nagoshi 2011; Specht & Roque‐Specht 2016), and may be associated with mechanisms related to reducing the probability of endogenous matings, at least, between individuals descended from the same egg mass (Bavaresco et al 2004; Crocomo & Parra 1985; Rosa et al 2012). This also allows newly emerged females to release pheromones attracting males from other egg masses but probably descendants of other females.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Female pupal duration, significantly shorter than that of males, had already been reported for the same species whose larvae were fed on ryegrass (Foerster & Mello 1996), is related to protogyny, especially reported for the pupal stage of noctuids (Montezano et al 2013, 2014a, 2016; Nagoshi 2011; Specht & Roque‐Specht 2016), and may be associated with mechanisms related to reducing the probability of endogenous matings, at least, between individuals descended from the same egg mass (Bavaresco et al 2004; Crocomo & Parra 1985; Rosa et al 2012). This also allows newly emerged females to release pheromones attracting males from other egg masses but probably descendants of other females.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The indices of consumption and substrate use for insects, applied as assessment criteria, have been used in most studies as indicators of the adequacy of diets, revealing that their specific components can profoundly affect insect behavior and physiology (Crocomo & Parra, 1985). For example, Straub, Tanga, Osuga, Windisch, and Subramanian (2019) studied five different diets in crickets and locusts to assess their consumption, biomass gain, and feed conversion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, all small FAW larvae that escaped predation during the first five days of the experiment were able to develop into the third instar and feed freely from maize plants until the end of the experiment. In this context, several studies report that as FAW larvae grow into their later instars, they increase their food intake, causing greater damage to the leaves (Assefa & Ayalew, 2019;Costa et al, 2006;Crócomo & Parra, 1985;de Sousa Ramalho et al, 2011) and reducing plant biomass. Furthermore, a previous study by Peralta (2014), indicated that in corn crops under FAW larvae attack and without pest control measures, maize plants go from level 1 to level 5 of damage in less than 15 days.…”
Section: Visual Damage Estimationmentioning
confidence: 99%