1984
DOI: 10.1071/bi9840367
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Dieldrin and Diazinon Resistance in Populations of the Australian Sheep Blowfly, Lucilia cuprina, from Sheep-grazing Areas and Rubbish Tips

Abstract: Populations of L. cuprina collected from adjacent sheep-grazing areas and rubbish tips in Victoria (Mansfield and Warrnambool) and New South Wales (Lismore) were tested for resistance to the insecticides diazinon and dieldrin. Populations from sheep-grazing areas had a significantly higher diazinon Rop-l allele frequency than those from adjacent tips with the Victorian populations being more resistant than those from Lismore. Victorian sheep and tip populations had similar gene frequencies at the dieldrin resi… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…It should be noted that the present results do not provide an explanation for the recessiveness of resistance, with respect to viability, observed in egg implant studies on sheep over a considerable concentration range 1984). Irrespective of the facilitation of SS, the RS genotype was significantly more viable in the presence of diazinon.…”
Section: ±094mentioning
confidence: 66%
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“…It should be noted that the present results do not provide an explanation for the recessiveness of resistance, with respect to viability, observed in egg implant studies on sheep over a considerable concentration range 1984). Irrespective of the facilitation of SS, the RS genotype was significantly more viable in the presence of diazinon.…”
Section: ±094mentioning
confidence: 66%
“…However, recent studies in L. cuprina have shown specific fitness differences may occur at concentrations that are sub-lethal for each genotype 1984) questioning both the tenet of fixed fitness sets and the assumption that fitness is determined only by concentration thresholds about which mortality is genotypically dependent (Brown and Pal, 1971). That is, they suggest that the evolution of insecticide resistance may involve soft, rather than hard, selective processes in some circumstances .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, in the case of dieldrin resistance a new chemical was substituted for blowfly control soon after resistance evolved so that resistant homozygotes never constituted more than 20 per cent of the population (Hughes and McKenzie, 1986). Continued use of diazinon after resistance evolved to that insecticide reaching near fixation in some populations McKenzie, 1984). If the general genetical arguments on the conditions necessary for the selection of fitness modifiers (Fisher, 1958;Charlesworth, 1979) are extended to studies on resistance it is apparent that such modifiers can only be at a selective advantage in the presence of the resistance allele.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…cuprina may be collected over a considerable geographic range, in proximity to sheep and in adjacent refuse tips (Waterhouse and Paramo nov 1950;Norris 1959;Kitching 1974). While tip populations are often seen as transient there is some evidence that this may not be the case (Foster et al 1975;Rice 1986) particularly as insecticide-resistant genotypes indicate differentiation between adjacent populations as an outcome of a balance between selection and limited gene flow (McKenzie 1983(McKenzie , 1984. This study attempts to elucidate this model of population structure within the framework discussed above.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%