Abstract

An orange-eye mutant of the brown planthopper (BPH), Nilaparvata lugens (Stål), was found in a green house and has since been maintained together with a normal-eye phenotype of BPH in an insectary. The orange color was expressed in all developmental stages of BPH: the eye spots of eggs and the eyes of nymphs and adults of both sexes and wing forms. Cross-mating results suggested that the inheritance of the orange-eye phenotype is controlled by a single autosomal recessive allele. The gene symbol related to this mutant was designated as “org”. Developmental duration and mortality of nymphal stages were not significantly different between the normal phenotype (homozygous and heterozygous) and the mutant. In addition, reproduction was not significantly different among mating combinations of the three BPH genotypes (+/+, +/org, org/org). The effect of eye color on mating of BPH was insignificant in a mate choice test which consisted of one orange-eye female, one orange-eye male, and one homozygous normal-eye male. Offspring produced by the orange-eye female BPH hatched and developed into adults normally, indicating that the eye color mutant found in this study is different from the red-eye BPH (Mochida, 1970) which showed the egg lethal effect in the red-eye BPH female.

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