22 results on '"M. Kostyukovsky"'
Search Results
2. List of Contributors
- Author
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A.J. Alldrick, E.V.M. Andersen, A. Ariosti, E. Espada Aventín, E. Bugge, D. Burfoot, G.K. Christian, R.W.R. Crevel, A. Demirci, K. Fikiin, A.R.H. Fischer, L.J. Frewer, A. Friis, P.J. Fryer, D. Gabrić, K. Galić, K.R. Goode, A. Graßhoff, C. Griffith, D. Gueguen, A.P.M. Hasting, J. Holah, H. Hoogland, I.H. Huisman, B.B.B. Jensen, G. Kaptan, J. Kold, M. Kostyukovsky, H.L.M. Lelieveld, L.J.S. Lukasse, K. Mager, J.-Y. Maillard, Á. McConnon, M. McHardy, H. Miettinen, F. Moerman, P.K. Mogensen, S.E. Mortimore, Y. Motarjemi, M.E. Oner, P. Overbosch, E. Partington, P.D. Pierce, V.M. Puri, E. Quinn, J. Redfern, Á. Regan, Joe M. Regenstein, D. Rosner, S. Salo, R.H. Schmidt, R. Schmitt, F. Tracy Schonrock, E. Shaaya, C. Silverman, D.L. Smith, R. Stahlkopf, J.M. Straver, J. Taylour, E.U. Thoden van Velzen, H. Timmerman, E.D. van Asselt, I. Van Rijn, J. Verran, S. Vidaček, Iuliana Vintilă, C.A. Wallace, X. Wang, S. West, G. Wirtanen, and M.H. Zwietering
- Published
- 2016
3. Note: Transovarial activity of the chitin synthesis inhibitor novaluron on egg hatch and subsequent development of larvae ofTribolium castaneum
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A. Trostanetsky and M. Kostyukovsky
- Subjects
Novaluron ,Larva ,animal structures ,fungi ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Chitin synthesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Exposure period ,Botany ,Instar ,Volume concentration - Abstract
The effects of the chitin synthesis inhibitor (CSI) novaluron on egg hatch and on larval development ofTribolium castaneum (Herbst) concentrations of 1.0, 0.3, 0.2 or 0.1 ppm were tested. The effect of novaluron at low concentrations depended strongly on the exposure period. At 0.3 ppm, egg hatch ofT. castaneum was totally inhibited after 28 days; at 0.2 ppm the effect was much less but inhibition increased progressively to 66% in the 35-day experiment; at 0.1 ppm novaluron was ineffective. The viability of the larvae that hatched from the laid eggs and developed on untreated flour was also dependent on concentration of novaluron and exposure time: exposure ofT. castaneum adults to novaluron-treated flour at 0.3 ppm for 8 days, or at 0.2 ppm for 36 days, caused 100% or 97.5% mortality, respectively. At both 0.3 and 0.2 ppm, larval deaths were mainly in the first instar. Exposure ofT. castaneum adults to treated flour may serve as a good model for evaluating the effect of CSIs on internal feeders, especiallySitophilus oryzae (L.). The present study contributes to our understanding of CSI transovarial activity against internal stored product coleopterans whose larval stage develops inside the grain without contact with the toxicants.
- Published
- 2008
4. Bioactivity of Ocimum gratissimum L. oil and two of its constituents against five insect pests attacking stored food products
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E. O. Omolo, A. L. Deng, Joshua O. Ogendo, U. Ravid, M. Kostyukovsky, E. Shaaya, Samuel T. Kariuki, and Josphat C. Matasyoh
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biology ,ved/biology ,Sitophilus ,fungi ,Ocimum gratissimum ,ved/biology.organism_classification_rank.species ,Fumigation ,Oryzaephilus surinamensis ,Horticulture ,biology.organism_classification ,law.invention ,Toxicology ,Eugenol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,law ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Bioassay ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Essential oil ,Food Science ,Callosobruchus chinensis - Abstract
The fumigant and repellent effects of Ocimum gratissimum L. oil and its constituents, β-(Z)-ocimene and eugenol, were evaluated against adults of Sitophilus oryzae (L.), Tribolium castaneum (Herbst), Oryzaephilus surinamensis (L.), Rhyzopertha dominica (F.) and Callosobruchus chinensis (L.). The fumigant toxicities of the oil and two of its constituents were assessed at four rates (0, 1, 5 and10 μL/L air) in space fumigation, whereas repellence of the oil and eugenol in acetone was evaluated in choice bioassays at five rates (0, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 and 4.0 μL oil/2 g grain). Results showed that fumigant toxicity and repellence of the oil and its constituents were significantly (P
- Published
- 2008
5. Transovarial Effect of Novaluron on Tribolium castaneum (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) After Termination of Direct Contact
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M. Kostyukovsky, E. Quinn, and A. Trostanetsky
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animal structures ,Time Factors ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Insect ,Biology ,chitin synthesis inhibitor ,Toxicology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tribolium castaneum ,Insect growth regulator ,Botany ,Animals ,novaluron ,media_common ,Ovum ,Wheat grain ,Novaluron ,Tribolium ,Stored grain ,Hatching ,Phenylurea Compounds ,Reproduction ,Research ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,egg hatching restoration ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,embryonic structures ,Female - Abstract
The insect growth regulator novaluron (Rimon 10 EC, Makhteshim-Agan Ltd, Israel) is used against many field pests on corn, vegetables, orchards, forests, and cotton plantations. Previously, we studied various effects of novaluron on stored grain pests. Termination in Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) eggs hatching after treating adults with novaluron and following restoration after adult transfer to untreated media was observed. The objective of this study was to investigate the restoration of T. castaneum egg hatch following transfer of adults from treated media to untreated favorable and unfavorable media. The time needed for hatching restoration of 50% of eggs laid by adults transferred from novaluron (1 ppm) treated flour to untreated flour (RT50) was 2.7 d. RT50 for those transferred to untreated wheat grain was 4.1 d. RT90 in flour was 3.6 d, in grain--6.1 d. Varieties of RTs in grain and in flour with nonoverlapping confidence intervals indicate that RTs were significantly different. Delay of eggs hatching restoration for adults transferred from treated flour to unfavorable media (Petri dishes with limited amount of flour, lying of eggs not detected) was observed. RT50 in flour was 2.1 d and RT90--3.1 d, while RT50 in the unfavorable media was 3.4 d and RT90 6.5 d. Delayed effect of egg hatching restoration after adult transfer to unfavorable media provides evidence of the significant role of insect physiological state in novaluron excretion and (or) degradation by T. castaneum females.
- Published
- 2015
6. The effect of a new chitin synthesis inhibitor, novaluron, on various developmental stages of Tribolium castaneum (Herbst)
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A. Trostanetsky and M. Kostyukovsky
- Subjects
Novaluron ,Larva ,animal structures ,Hatching ,fungi ,Wheat flour ,food and beverages ,Horticulture ,Pesticide ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Chitin synthesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,embryonic structures ,Botany ,Infestation ,medicine ,PEST analysis ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Food Science - Abstract
Novaluron, a novel chitin synthesis inhibitor (CSI), was tested against the various developmental stages of Tribolium castaneum (Herbst), at concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 100 ppm. It did not kill T. castaneum adults at these concentrations, but at 1.0 ppm it caused total mortality of third-instar larvae. Novaluron did not affect the number of eggs laid by T. castaneum adults that were exposed to treated wheat flour, but it totally inhibited their hatching after the third day of exposure at a concentration of 1 ppm. On the first day after infestation novaluron did not totally prevent hatching, even at the highest tested concentration of 100 ppm. The time needed to restore egg hatchability after adults were transferred to untreated flour depended on the concentration of novaluron used in the treatment. When the adults of T. castaneum were exposed to novaluron-treated whole wheat grains (at 1 ppm), similar effects to those of the treated flour at the same concentration were observed: egg hatching was drastically reduced. The effect of uptake via contact of adults with novaluron-treated surfaces was examined by exposing them to a mixture of untreated flour and 10% novaluron-treated sand at a concentration of 10 ppm, and only 1% of the eggs hatched after 18 days of exposure. When adults were removed from treated surfaces of Petri dishes to untreated flour, the hatching rate was again reduced by 100%. It was concluded that the contact penetration of novaluron into T. castaneum adults prevents the hatching of eggs subsequently laid.
- Published
- 2006
7. THE POTENTIAL USE OF PLANT VOLATILES FOR THE CONTROL OF STORED PRODUCT INSECTS AND QUARANTINE PESTS IN CUT FLOWERS
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M. Kostyukovsky, E. Shaaya, and U. Ravid
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Horticulture ,law ,Quarantine ,Product (category theory) ,Cut flowers ,Biology ,law.invention - Published
- 2002
8. Abstracts of Presentations at the 18th Conference of the Entomological Society of Israel
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M. P. Pener, L. Anshelevich, E. Dunkelblum, M. Hard, A. Harari, D. Gordon, M. Kehat, H. Reuveny, O. Akunis, D. Oppenheim, Acta Rafaeli, Carina Gileadi, Akinori Hirashima, Yael Lubin, Mirjam Papke, Victoria Soroker, A. Hefetz, Z. Klein, Leah Zarabi, S. Ovadia, Dafna Blachinsky, B. Zemer, U. Tadmor, I. Levanon, M. Fish, Phyllis G. Weintraub, Hedva Pener, A. Wilamowski, Y. Braverman, J. A. Hogsette, A. Chizov-Ginzburg, A. Shlosberg, M. Kostyukovsky, E. Shaaya, A. Trostanetsky, C. Bin, A. Barazani, M. Wysoki, S. Rene, Miriam Eliyahu, D. Blumberg, Michal Shofet, Z. Herzog, S. Gross, Z. Mendel, Y. Drishpon, Avital Regev, H. Rivkin, N. Chejanovsky, E. Gershburg, O. Froy, M. Gurevitz, D. Avisar, B. Sneh, A. Zilberstein, M. Keller, N. Strizhov, Sz. Koncz, J. Schell, C. Koncz, E. Ben-Dov, A. Zarka, A. Zaritsky, R. Manasherob, S. Boussiba, D. Segal, I. Glazer, Miriam Altstein, Orna Ben-Aziz, Irit Schefler, Irina Zeltser, C. Gilon, B. Steinitz, A. Navon, Shlomit Levski, Y. Nakache, S. Biton, X.- Q. Wu, M. Myasnik, Y. Margalith, Z. Barak, H. Azaizeh, Galina Gindin, I. Barash, M. Klein, Alla Golberg, M. Giladi, D. Gerling, L. Salame, S. Goldenberg, M. Samish, E. Alekseev, Liora Shaltiel, M. Coll, M. Barkely, M. Guershon, Ronny Groenteman, Oshrat Borrow, M. Samara, Nelli Rajuan, Lishay David-Levanony, R. Gafny, A. Havron, A. Eliezer, Y. Ben-Dov, D. R. Miller, G. A. P. Gibson, A. L. L. Friedman, A. Freidberg, Q. Argaman, R. Dias, S. Navarro, E. Donahaye, Miriam Rindner, A. Azrieli, D. Hovevey-Zion, Mirit Hamburger, H. Keidar, E. Sompolinsky, M. Weiss, W. Kuslitzky, S. Bitten, J. Nakache, Nitza Saphir, A. Zehavi, Fabienne Assael, Liat Gahanama, M. Broza, Malka Halpern, M. Inbar, Dina Poliakov, S. Mossinson, P. W. Taylor, R. Kaspi, B. Yuval, Y. Yerushalmi, Netta Dorchin, O. Afik, S. Shafir, Lily Falach, A. Shani, O. Segev, Daphna Gottlieb, Tamar Keasar, A. Shmida, U. Motro, G. Menda, D. Ben-Yakir, M. Chen, M. Teitel, M. Barak, M. J. Berlinger, Sara Lebiush-Mordechai, Y. Messika, Y. Shamia, D. Rosen, O. Bar-Shalom, Y. Malihi, S. Ben-Yehuda, J. C. Franco, C. J. Carvalho, D. Wool, Hadass Cohen, Michal Mazor, A. Peysakhis, A. Ginzburg, Yael Argov, H. Voet, E. Palcvsky, Raisa Chyzik, Orna Ucko, S. Peles, and U. Gerson
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Agriculture ,business.industry ,Insect Science ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Library science ,Plant Science ,Biology ,business - Published
- 2001
9. Poster Session
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J. van S. Graver, H. J. Banks, A. K. Sharp, A. Contessi, N. Baldassari, M. Maggioli, Sabine Prozell, Ch. Reichmuth, Maria Otília Carvalho, Ana Paula Pereira, A. Mexia, Sylvia Allen, J. Desmarchelier, R. Reuss, P. C. Annis, Y. Khatri, A. Maia, A. Barbosa, Ana Paula Perdra, P. Cardoso, J. Riudavets, Katherine A. Damcevski, T. Griffith, M. Warren, Valerie Ducom-Gallerne, C. Vinghes, G. Dojchinov, Victoria Haritos, Helen A. Dowsett, Gaye Weller, C. P. Whittle, C. Waterford, S. Pratt, j. van S. Graver, Miriam Rindner, S. Navarro, J. E. Donahaye, R. Dias, A. Azrieli, Glory Sabio, Tiffanie Simpson, V. Bikoba, J. Shannon, M. I. Wibawa, Elizabeth J. Mitcham, M. Kostyukovsky, E. Shaaya, H. Ben-Halima, M. Q. Chaudhry, K. A. Mills, N. R. Price, R. N. Emery, and E. Kostas
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Insect Science ,Plant Science - Published
- 2001
10. Abstracts of Papers presented at a Workshop on Ecology of Botrytis and Sclerotinia and their Interaction With Other Microorganisms Abstracts of Papers Presented at a Workshop on Genetic Aspects ofFusarium oxysporum and Related Species Abstracts of Papers and Discussion Contributions Presented at the Dutch-Israeli (Diarp) Workshop on Environment-Friendly Crop Protection of the Flower Industry to Suit Future Market Trends
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A. Ten Have, W. Oude Breuil, J. Wubben, W. Mulder, J. Visser, J. van Kan, T. Quidde, P. Tudzynski, T. M. O’Neill, G. De Meyer, K. Audenaert, J. Bigirimana, M. Höfte, Tatiana Eugenia Sesan, Maria Oprea, N. Csep, Emilia Procopovici, Maria Guran, C. Tica, Aurelia Podosu Cristescu, F. Oancea, Y. Elad, D. Rav David, T. Levi, A. Kapat, B. Kirshner, E. Govrin, A. Levine, G. J. Boland, K. O’Donnell, E. Cigelnik, A. Chiocchetti, S. Ghignone, I. Bernardo, L. Sciaudone, M. L. Gullino, A. Garibaldi, Q. Migheli, J. N. Kung’u, P. Jeffries, R. P. Baayen, C. Waalwijk, P. J. M. Bonants, E. J. A. Roebroeck, U. L. Rosewich, R. E. Pettway, Talma Katan, H. C. Kistler, N. A. M. van Steekelenburg, Joanne J. Fransen, R. Ausher, M. Gokkes, M. P. Blind, A. R. Horowitz, I. Ishaaya, Y. Antignus, M. Lapidot, S. Cohen, Y. Gottlieb, D. Amsalem, A. Yad-Shalom, A. Gera, A. J. Dik, A. Kerssies, R. R. Bélanger, M. Valentijn-Benz, C. Lanser, E. Fischer, J. Amsing, A. Numansen, P. Paternotte, W. Runia, M. van der Sar, A. Gamliel, Y Ben-Yephet, J. Katan, Y Elad, A. Bar-Tal, A. Silber, T. Freidkin, Y. Murira, M. Kostyukovsky, E. Shaaya, Y. Carmi, Shulamit Atzmi, Y. Hameiri, Miriam Austerweil, Theo de Groot, S. Israel, A. A. van der Maas, R. L. M. van Uffelen, J. C. J. Ammerlaan, G. M. Splinter, M. N. A. Ruijs, and K. -J. Kramer
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food.ingredient ,business.industry ,Agroforestry ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Plant Science ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Environmentally friendly ,Biotechnology ,Crop protection ,food ,Agriculture ,Insect Science ,business ,Sclerotinia ,Botrytis - Published
- 1999
11. Phytochemicals as natural fumigants and contact insecticides against stored-product insects
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Nawal Kishore Dubey, M. Kostyukovsky, and E. Shaaya
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Horticulture ,chemistry ,business.industry ,fungi ,Pest control ,food and beverages ,Decanoic acid ,Product (category theory) ,Biology ,business ,Natural (archaeology) ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2010
12. Improving the control of insects in food processing
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E. Shaaya, R. Mailer, M. Kostyukovsky, and L. Mailer
- Published
- 2005
13. Microencapsulated formulations of chlorpyrifos as possible grain protectants
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A. Trostanetsky, M. Kostyukovsky, Y. Carmi, H. Frandji, and R. Schneider
- Abstract
The efficacy of two new microencapsulated formulations of chlorpyrifos against Sitophilus oryzae, Rhyzopertha dominica, Tribolium castaneum and Plodia interpunctella was studied under laboratory conditions. Master 25 and Master Quick at 10 and 20 ml/t were mixed with whole wheat grain as food. Master 25 resulted in the complete mortality of S. oryzae and T. castaneum adults at a concentration of 10 ml/t. A concentration of 20 ml/t was necessary to obtain 100% mortality in P. interpunctella larvae. Against R. dominica, Master 25 was not sufficiently effective at either rate. On the other hand, Master Quick resulted in 93 and 100% mortality of R. dominica adults at 10 and 20 ml/t, respectively, and 100% mortality of the other insects at 10 ml/t. Two months after treatment, the activity of Master 25 at 10 ml/t strongly decreased; at 20 ml/t, it was still highly active against S. oryzae, less active against T. castaneum and completely ineffective against R. dominica. On the other hand, Master Quick at 20 ml/t showed high activity against the insects, including R. dominica.
- Published
- 2003
14. Biological activity of Novaluron, a new chitin-synthesis inhibitor, on the major stored product insect pests
- Author
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M. Kostyukovsky, A. Trostanetsky, Y. Carmi, H. Frandji, and R. Schneider
- Abstract
Novaluron is a novel chitin-synthesis inhibitor from the benzoyl phenyl ureas group of insect growth regulators. It has a broad-spectrum activity on various insects, but very low toxicity to mammals (LD50>5000 mg/kg). The objective of the study reported was to evaluate the efficacy of Novaluron against the main stored product insect pests, as a possible alternative to standard pesticides for stored-product pest control. The test insects were the beetles Sitophilus oryzae, Rhyzopertha dominica, and Tribolium castaneum, and the moth Plodia interpunctella. According to the differences in the life cycle and conditions for development of the test insects, adults of S. oryzae and R. dominica, and larvae of T. castaneum and P. interpunctella, were used. Concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 10 ppm of Novaluron were mixed with three kinds of food media: whole wheat grain for the internal pests S. oryzae and R. dominica, ground grain for the external feeder P. interpunctella and flour for T. castaneum. The results showed that Novaluron at 1 ppm reduced the number of new generation adults of S. oryzae and R. dominica by 95% compared with the control, and prevented the emergence of adults of P. interpunctella. At this concentration, Novaluron also yielded total mortality of T. castaneum third instar larvae. At 0.1 ppm, Novaluron had no effect on the insects tested.
- Published
- 2003
15. Alternative fumigants for the control of stored-product insects
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E. Shaaya, M. Kostyukovsky, and N. Demchenko
- Subjects
fungi - Abstract
Methyl bromide and phosphine are the most widely used fumigants for controlling pest infestation in grain, dry food products and quarantine insects in cut flowers. Some stored-product insects have developed resistance to phosphine and, with the proposed phase out of methyl bromide in the near future, there is an urgent need to search for suitable alternatives. This study reported here evaluated the potential of methyl iodide (CH3I), carbon disulfide (CS2), benzaldehyde (C7H6O), and several isothiocyanates against the main stored-product insects. The toxicity of the various fumigants was assessed against adults, pupae and larvae of six major stored-product insects. We report on the isolation and fumigant activity of several isothiocyanates from Cruciferae seeds. One of these, isolated from Eruca sativa, was partially identified as alkil-thio-alkil-isothiocyanate.
- Published
- 2003
16. Examination of genetic lines of Myrtus communis as potential sources of organic agricultural pest control agents.
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Quinn E, Ben-Simchon E, Gorelick J, Oka Y, Frenkel O, Sionov E, Kostyukovsky M, Dudai N, Shimshoni J, Zilkah S, Cohen M, Rapaport A, and Shelef O
- Abstract
Myrtus communis is a Mediterranean shrub cultivated in Israel for traditional, ceremonial use only, with more than 98 % of the crop biomass, equivalent to 26-27 tons per ha per annum, considered agricultural waste. Therefore, potentially profitable use for this excess is being highly sought. As Myrtus is also known for its unique terpene and terpenoid content, this work evaluated the impact of essential oil (EO) extracted from several M. communis cultivars on storage insects, nematodes, fungi, and pathogens. In addition, the allelopathic effect of M. communis litter on the germination success of wheat seeds was evaluated. The EO extracts demonstrated an insecticidal effect on several storage insects in fumigation experiment and a potentially inhibiting effect on wheat development in allelopathy experiments. No significant impact of M. communis EOs on the examined fungi, pathogens, and nematodes was recorded. Additional uses of the M. communis biomass suggest supplying additional income to the farmer through the circular agriculture approach. In addition, the use of this local crop can contribute to sustainable intensification by increasing farming efficiency, providing nature-based substitutes for chemical pesticides, and possibly, improving the future design of agriculture through the integration of Myrtus in monoculture crops., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Oren Shelef reports was provided by Agricultural Research Organization. Oren Shelef reports a relationship with Agricultural Research Organization that includes: employment. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Integrated Pest Management for Stored Grain: Potential Natural Biological Control by a Parasitoid Wasp Community.
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Harush A, Quinn E, Trostanetsky A, Rapaport A, Kostyukovsky M, and Gottlieb D
- Abstract
Insect contamination of stored grain is a major concern for the grain industry. Phosphine is currently the standard fumigant used to control insect pests in stored grain. However, some species and populations of insects that infest stored grain exhibit resistance to this fumigant and consumers are concerned about pesticide residues. Therefore, alternative methods of effective pest control are needed to partially or completely replace the use of phosphine. There is growing interest in biological control via parasitoid wasps. However, there is evidence that biological control will succeed only if used alongside other pest-management measures. Integrating biological control with the use of chemical insecticide is challenging and may lead to severe reductions in parasitoid survival and success. The main aim of the current study is to shed light on a greatly overlooked issue: the parasitoid community found in stored grain before and after phosphine treatment. The current study results indicate that there is a high level of parasitoid biodiversity within grain stores. We found common parasitoids at both semi-arid and Mediterranean sites, suggesting that those parasitoids can be active across a wide range of abiotic conditions. This research indicates that the community may recover even though phosphine has an immediate negative effect on a parasitoid community. Nevertheless, the parasitoid wasps seem to reduce the host population insufficiently. In light of the findings presented here, those interested in implementing pest-management strategies that include both phosphine treatment and biological control should consider conservation and augmentation of the naturally occurring parasitoid population. These studies should take into account interactions between and within parasitoid populations and phosphine distribution within the grain storage. To limit the effect of phosphine on the parasitoids, pest-management strategies should also reflect careful consideration of the timing of phosphine treatment and the need for sufficient refuge for the parasitoids.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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18. Coarse and nano emulsions for effective delivery of the natural pest control agent pulegone for stored grain protection.
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Golden G, Quinn E, Shaaya E, Kostyukovsky M, and Poverenov E
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- Animals, Cyclohexane Monoterpenes, Emulsions, Food Storage, Edible Grain, Insect Control, Insecticides, Monoterpenes, Tribolium, Weevils
- Abstract
Background: One of the most significant contributors to the global food crisis is grain loss during storage, mainly caused by pest insects. Currently, there are two main methods used for insect pest control: fumigation and grain protection using contact insecticides. As some chemical insecticides can harm humans and the environment, there is a global tendency to reduce their use by finding alternative eco-friendly approaches., Results: In this study, the natural pest-managing agent pulegone was encapsulated into coarse and nano emulsions. The emulsions were characterized using spectroscopic and microscopic methods and their stability and pulegone release ability were examined. The insecticidal activity of the prepared formulations against two stored product insects, rice weevil (Sitophilus oryzae L.) and red flour beetle (Tribolium castaneum Herbst), was demonstrated. The nano emulsion-based formulation offered significant advantages and provided powerful bioactivity, with high (> 90%) mortality rates for as long as 5 weeks for both insects, whereas coarse emulsions showed high efficacy for only 1 week., Conclusion: The developed pulegone-based nano emulsions could serve as a model for an effective alternative method for pest control. Although pulegone is from a natural source, toxicological studies should be performed before the widespread application of pulegone or pulegone-containing essential oils to dry food products. © 2017 Society of Chemical Industry., (© 2017 Society of Chemical Industry.)
- Published
- 2018
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19. Rapid Detection and Identification of Mycotoxigenic Fungi and Mycotoxins in Stored Wheat Grain.
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Sadhasivam S, Britzi M, Zakin V, Kostyukovsky M, Trostanetsky A, Quinn E, and Sionov E
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- Chromatography, Liquid, Fungi classification, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Edible Grain microbiology, Food Contamination analysis, Fungi isolation & purification, Mycotoxins analysis, Triticum microbiology
- Abstract
This study aimed to assess the occurrence of toxigenic fungi and mycotoxin contamination in stored wheat grains by using advanced molecular and analytical techniques. A multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) strategy was established for rapid identification of mycotoxigenic fungi, and an improved analytical method was developed for simultaneous multi-mycotoxin determination in wheat grains by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) without the need for any clean-up. The optimized multiplex PCR method was highly specific in detecting fungal species containing species-specific and mycotoxin metabolic pathway genes. The method was applied for evaluation of 34 wheat grain samples collected from storage warehouses for the presence of mycotoxin-producing fungi, and a few samples were found positive for Fusarium and Aspergillus species. Further chemical analysis revealed that 17 samples contained mycotoxins above the level of detection, but only six samples were found to be contaminated over the EU regulatory limits with at least one mycotoxin. Aflatoxin B₁, fumonisins, and deoxynivalenol were the most common toxins found in these samples. The results showed a strong correlation between the presence of mycotoxin biosynthesis genes as analyzed by multiplex PCR and mycotoxin detection by LC/MS/MS. The present findings indicate that a combined approach might provide rapid, accurate, and sensitive detection of mycotoxigenic species and mycotoxins in wheat grains., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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20. Transovarial Effect of Novaluron on Tribolium castaneum (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) After Termination of Direct Contact.
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Trostanetsky A, Kostyukovsky M, and Quinn E
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- Animals, Female, Reproduction drug effects, Time Factors, Ovum drug effects, Phenylurea Compounds toxicity, Tribolium drug effects
- Abstract
The insect growth regulator novaluron (Rimon 10 EC, Makhteshim-Agan Ltd, Israel) is used against many field pests on corn, vegetables, orchards, forests, and cotton plantations. Previously, we studied various effects of novaluron on stored grain pests. Termination in Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) eggs hatching after treating adults with novaluron and following restoration after adult transfer to untreated media was observed. The objective of this study was to investigate the restoration of T. castaneum egg hatch following transfer of adults from treated media to untreated favorable and unfavorable media. The time needed for hatching restoration of 50% of eggs laid by adults transferred from novaluron (1 ppm) treated flour to untreated flour (RT50) was 2.7 d. RT50 for those transferred to untreated wheat grain was 4.1 d. RT90 in flour was 3.6 d, in grain--6.1 d. Varieties of RTs in grain and in flour with nonoverlapping confidence intervals indicate that RTs were significantly different. Delay of eggs hatching restoration for adults transferred from treated flour to unfavorable media (Petri dishes with limited amount of flour, lying of eggs not detected) was observed. RT50 in flour was 2.1 d and RT90--3.1 d, while RT50 in the unfavorable media was 3.4 d and RT90 6.5 d. Delayed effect of egg hatching restoration after adult transfer to unfavorable media provides evidence of the significant role of insect physiological state in novaluron excretion and (or) degradation by T. castaneum females., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Entomological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Activation of octopaminergic receptors by essential oil constituents isolated from aromatic plants: possible mode of action against insect pests.
- Author
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Kostyukovsky M, Rafaeli A, Gileadi C, Demchenko N, and Shaaya E
- Subjects
- Acetylcholinesterase drug effects, Acetylcholinesterase metabolism, Animals, Cholinesterase Inhibitors pharmacology, Coleoptera drug effects, Coleoptera growth & development, Cyclic AMP metabolism, Cyclohexenes, Insecta growth & development, Larva drug effects, Larva growth & development, Lepidoptera drug effects, Lepidoptera growth & development, Limonene, Pest Control methods, Phentolamine pharmacology, Receptors, Biogenic Amine antagonists & inhibitors, Insecta drug effects, Octopamine metabolism, Oils, Volatile toxicity, Plants chemistry, Receptors, Biogenic Amine metabolism, Terpenes toxicity
- Abstract
As a result of screening a large number of essential oils from Israeli aromatic plants and their biologically active constituents, we isolated two oils with high activity against several stored-product insects. In this study the effect of these compounds on the acetylcholinesterase and the octopamine systems in insects was studied in order to elucidate their mode of action. Inhibition of acetylcholinesterase activity in vitro was evident only at high concentrations (10(-3) M) and could not account effectively for the low-dose mortality for some stored-product insects observed in vivo. However, the essential oil constituents were found to cause a significant increase in the levels of the intracellular messenger, cyclic AMP of abdominal epidermal tissue in the model insect, Helicoverpa armigera Hübn. The effect was significant even at low, physiological concentrations (10(-8) M) when tested directly on abdominal epidermal tissue preparations in vitro. This intracellular response was found to resemble closely the significant increases in the levels of the cyclic AMP of abdominal epidermal tissue due to treatment with the neurotransmitter/neuromodulator, octopamine. Subsequent treatment with the octopaminergic antagonist, phentolamine, effectively inhibited the cyclic AMP levels induced by essential oil treatment, indicating possible competitive activation of octopaminergic receptors by essential oil constituents.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Biological activity of two juvenoids and two ecdysteroids against three stored product insects.
- Author
-
Kostyukovsky M, Chen B, Atsmi S, and Shaaya E
- Subjects
- Animals, Ecdysteroids, Hydrazines, Methoprene, Pyridines, Coleoptera physiology, Insect Control methods, Insect Hormones, Insecticides, Juvenile Hormones, Steroids, Tribolium physiology
- Abstract
The insecticidal activity of juvenile hormone agonists methoprene and pyriproxyfen, and the ecdysone agonists RH-5849 and tebufenozide was evaluated against susceptible and actellic-resistant strains of Tribolium castaneum and susceptible strains of Rhyzopertha dominica and Sitophilus oryzae. Concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 20 ppm of the analogues were mixed in the food medium to which the tested insects were exposed. The results showed that all these compounds could affect the development of the tested species to differing extents but had no effect on the mortality of parental adults. The two JH analogues did not prolong the life span of R. dominica and S. oryzae, but very greatly extended that of T. castaneum. The extension led to the production of giant larvae and failure to pupate. Actellic-resistant strain of T. castaneum showed some cross-resistance to methoprene and pyriproxyfen, but not to RH-5849 and tebufenozide. Pyriproxyfen was the most effective compound among the four IGRs; a concentration of 0.1 ppm could completely inhibit the F(1) adult occurrence of both S- and R-strains of T. castaneum and its LC(90)s for controlling R. dominica and S. oryzae were 0.1 and 1.2 ppm, respectively. Methoprene was highly effective against R. dominica, but less active on S. oryzae. RH-5849 could achieve almost complete control of F(1) adults of T. castaneum and R. dominica at 10 ppm, but was less potent on S. oryzae. Tebufenozide appeared to be much less active on these three species compared with the other three compounds. The percentage reductions of F(1) adults for S- and R-strains of T. castaneum at a concentration of 20 ppm were 80 and 99%, respectively.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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