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Southern army worm larvae

Highly toxic substances, such as cyanides, are sometimes feeding cues and stimulants for specialized insects. For example, instar larvae of the southern armyworm (Spodoptera eridania) strongly prefer cyanogenic foods, such as foliage of the lima bean, a plant with comparatively elevated cyanide content — up to 31 mg/kg in some varieties — in the form of linamurin (Brattsten et al. 1983). Feeding was stimulated in southern army worms at dietary levels up to 508 mg KCN/kg... [Pg.926]

Experimental studies with southern armyworm larvae and thiocyanate — one of the in vivo cyanide metabolites — showed that 5000 mg thiocyanate/kg diet reduced pupation by 77%, completely inhibited oviposition, and reduced adult emergence by 80% (Brattsten et al. 1983), strongly suggesting that thiocyanate poisoning is the primary effect of high dietary cyanide levels in southern army worms. [Pg.927]

Grijfonia simplicifolia proved to be highly toxic to the larvae of southern army worms in artificial diets 0 normal adults were produced by the insects fed the diets with this compound as compared with control values of about 20 (Rehr et al., 1973b Rosenthal, 1982). [Pg.228]


See other pages where Southern army worm larvae is mentioned: [Pg.178]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.169]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.111 ]




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Armies

Army worm

Larvae

Southern

Southern army worm

Worms

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