“…In this sense, some work has been done in the past with major soybean pests, which usually did not compared hosts or species (Reid and Greene 1973, Gamundi 1988, Barrionuevo et al 2012, Favetti et al 2015), studied the consumption of different host plants by the same insect species (Kidd and Orr 2001, Bavaresco et al 2003, Barros et al 2010, Montezano et al 2014, 2019, Naseri et al 2014, Moonga and Davis 2016, Specht and Roque Specht 2016, Gomes et al 2017, Silva et al 2017a), have focused on soybeans with a reduced range of insect species (Silva et al 2017b, Specht et al 2019), or compared Bt and non-Bt soybeans in a reduced number of species (Yu et al 2013, Bernardi et al 2014, Adams et al 2016, Silva et al 2016). The most complete characterizations that we are aware of focused on small larvae feeding vegetative tissues on non-Bt soybeans (Boldt et al 1975, Bueno et al 2011, 2013) or compared to Bt soybeans (MacRae et al 2005, Murua et al 2018). However, since most of the species mentioned above also consume soybean reproductive tissues (Fitt 1989, Hoffmann-Campo et al 2000, Santos et al 2005, Ramírez y Gómez 2010, Azambuja et al 2015, Silva et al 2017b), Intacta soybeans are widely prevalent in South America, and usually late-stages larvae move from weeds or neighbor crops (Azambuja et al 2015) prompted us to integrate all these aspects.…”