Journal article
Predicting insecticide resistance: Mutagenesis, selection and response
JA McKenzie, P Batterham
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences | ROYAL SOC LONDON | Published : 1998
Abstract
Strategies to manage resistance to a particular insecticide have usually been devised after resistance has evolved. If it were possible to predict likely resistance mechanisms to novel insecticides before they evolved in the field, it might be feasible to have programmes that manage susceptibility. With this approach in mind, single-gene variants of the Australian sheep blowfly, Lucilia cuprina, resistant to dieldrin, diazinon and malathion, were selected in the laboratory after mutagenesis of susceptible strains. The genetic and molecular bases of resistance in these variants were identical to those that had previously evolved in natural populations. Given this predictive capacity for known..
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