Fall armyworm infestation and development : screening tropical maize genotypes for resistance in Zambia

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Authors

Kasoma, Chapwa
Shimelis, Hussein
Laing, Mark D.
Mekonnen, Bethelihem

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Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

Knowledge of fall armyworm (FAW) (Spodoptera frugiperda J.E. Smith) rearing, infestation and development and precision screening protocols are preconditions for the successful introgression of resistance genes into farmer-preferred varieties. We aimed to determine FAWdevelopmental stages, screen tropical maize and select resistant lines under controlled conditions in Zambia. Field-collected FAWsamples constituting 30 egg masses and 60 larvae were reared using maize leaf- and stalk-based and soy- and wheat flour-based diets at 27 1 C, 60 5% relative humidity and 12 h day length. The resulting neonates were separated into sets A and B. The life cycles of set A and field-collected larvae were monitored to document the FAW developmental features. Set B neonates were used to infest the seedlings of 63 diverse tropical maize genotypes. Egg, larva, pupa and adult stages had mean durations of 2, 24, 20 and 12 days, respectively. Test maize genotypes revealed significant differences (p < 0.05) based on FAWreaction types, with lines TL13159, TL02562, TL142151, VL050120 and CML548-B exhibiting resistance reactions, while CML545-B, CZL1310c, CZL16095, EBL169550, ZM4236 and Pool 16 displayed moderate resistance. These genotypes are candidate sources of FAW resistance for further breeding. This study will facilitate controlled FAW rearing for host screening in the integration of FAW resistance into market-preferred maize lines.

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DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : All data are provided in the manuscript.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL : TABLE S1: Artificial diet used for laboratory rearing of FAW. TABLE S2: Mean performance and AUPPCs of 63 tropical maize genotypes when evaluated under artificial FAW infestation. TABLE S3: Nature and magnitude of FAW damage revealed by 63 tropical maize genotypes evaluated under artificial FAW infestation. Supplementary FIGURE S1: Diets used for rearing FAW on petri dishes. S1A- Natural diet of maize leaves and stalks. S1BArtificial diet containing wheat, soy and other ingredients. Supplementary FIGURE S2: Rearing cage for adult FAW moths.

Keywords

Area under pest progress curve, Host-plant resistance, Infestation level, Stages of life cycle, FAW rearing, Pest reaction type, Resistance breeding, Fall armyworm (FAW)

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Citation

Kasoma, C.; Shimelis, H.; Laing, M.D.; Mekonnen, B. Fall Armyworm Infestation and Development: Screening Tropical Maize Genotypes for Resistance in Zambia. Insects 2022, 13, 1020. https://DOI.org/10.3390/insects13111020.