Abstract

SummaryFifteen Brassica species and subspecies, as well as accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana and Eruca sativa, were evaluated for their resistance to the cabbage aphid, Brevicoryne brassicae, in the field and laboratory at Horticulture Research International (HRI) Wellesbourne in 1992. In the laboratory, aphid performance was measured in terms of pre‐reproductive period, reproductive period, population increase and insect survival. Using these parameters it was possible to identify brassicas possessing antibiosis resistance. In the field B. brassicae attack was assessed in terms of numbers of insects and it was possible to determine aphid preferences for alighting on different species. High levels of antixenosis and antibiosis resistance were discovered in accessions of Brassica fruticulosa and B. spinescens, in a Brassica juncea breeding line and in Eruca sativa. Partial resistance was found in several other Brassica species. The potential of these various sources as donors of resistance genes to be bred into cultivated brassicas is discussed.

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