Abstract

The use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a tool for in vivo detection of eggs in living Dasylepida ishigakiensis Niijima et Kinoshita, a major pest of sugarcane, was explored using females with an ovary at different developmental stages. MRI measurements of beetles were performed at 13 °C to avoid motion artifacts on the MR images. Spin–lattice relaxation time-weighted images allowed the observation of eggs at short acquisition times (2 min, 8 s). By comparing MR images with dissection data, criteria for determining mature eggs in MR images were a clear circular or ellipsoidal shape surrounded by a relatively bright rim and a size typically larger than 1.3 mm in the minor axis. Although small oocytes could not be detected, females with a developed or undeveloped ovary could be clearly distinguished based on MR images. The possibility of confusing the digestive tract as eggs in a female with a less developed ovary can be eliminated using a proton density weighted image.

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