Volume 15, Number 3, 895-903, DOI: 10.1007/BF01015185

Feeding and oviposition preferences of sweet potato weevil,Cylas formicarius elegantulus (Summers), on storage roots of sweet potato cultivars with differing surface chemistries

Stephen F. Nottingham, Ki -Cheol Son, David D. Wilson, Ray F. Severson and Stanley J. Kays

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Abstract

Cores from sweet potato [Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam.] storage roots (Centennial, Jewel, Resisto, and Regal cultivars) were presented to sweet potato weevils [Cylas formicarius elegantulus (Summers) (Coleoptera; Curculionidae)] in multiple-choice, limited-choice, and no-choice bioassays. Centennial, a susceptible cultivar in field-plot experiments, was preferred for feeding and oviposition by female weevils in choice bioassays, and for ovi-position in no-choice bioassays, compared to three other cultivars. Analysis of root surface chemistry showed a tentatively identified triterpenol acetate in Centennial, which was not found in the more resistant cultivars; another root surface component was found in higher concentrations in the more resistant cultivars.

Key words  Sweet potato weevil -  Cylas formicarius elegantulus  - Coleoptera - Curculionidae -  Ipomoea batatas  - feeding - oviposition - host-plant preference - host-plant resistance - root surface chemistry

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