Abstract

Acanthoscelides obtectus (Say) and Zabrotes subfasciatus (Boheman) are the main bruchid pests of stored beans in widespread regions of Latin America and Africa. Host-plant resistance based on the protein arcelin is effective in reducing damage caused by Z. subfasciatus, but beans containing arcelin remain susceptible to A. obtectus. The compatibility of combining arcelin resistance with biological control by Dinarmus basalis (Rondani) was investigated in climatic chambers. Three arcelin containing bean varieties with high and intermediate resistance towards Z. subfasciatus (RAZ 36, RAZ 94 and RAZ 104) and an arcelin-free standard (Calima, susceptible to both bruchids) were investigated. Immature development of A. obtectus in arcelin-containing beans was prolonged by 15% as compared to the standard, allowing D. basalis to have access to suitable host stages for a longer period of time. Over a 20-week storage period, the combined use of resistant host plants and biological control agents yielded best results with the host-plant varieties RAZ 94 and RAZ 104. In both varieties, parasitoids managed to keep bruchid damage below 1% as compared to 4.7% in the arcelin-free standard, and bruchids were eradicated in 80% of the replicates. Control levels in RAZ 36, the bean variety with the highest resistance to Z. subfasciatus, were not greater than the standard. Our results show that the combination of certain arcelin-enriched bean varieties with the parasitoid D. basalis is favourable for suppressing damage by A. obtectus.

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