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1 December 2000 Roles of Selection Intensity, Major Genes, and Minor Genes in Evolution of Insecticide Resistance
Francis R. Groeters, Bruce E. Tabashnik
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Abstract

A prominent hypothesis about insecticide resistance is that genesof major effect play a key role in field-evolved resistance because theintensity of selection is extremely high in the field. A corollaryhypothesis is that the lower intensity of selection in laboratoryselection experiments favors polygenic control of insecticideresistance. Contrary to these hypotheses, a literature review revealedthat the intensity of selection for insecticide resistance in the fieldvaries widely and overlaps broadly with selection intensities in thelaboratory. Also contrary to these hypotheses, results from simulationsof population genetic models suggest that selection intensities typicalof laboratory selection experiments favor resistance that is conferredby major genes. Major genes dominated responses to selection forresistance across a wide range of simulated selection intensities, withand without fitness costs and refuges. The simulation results alsosuggest that the intensity of selection, rather than the number of lociconferring resistance, is central in determining rates of resistanceevolution and effectiveness of refuges.

Francis R. Groeters and Bruce E. Tabashnik "Roles of Selection Intensity, Major Genes, and Minor Genes in Evolution of Insecticide Resistance," Journal of Economic Entomology 93(6), 1580-1587, (1 December 2000). https://doi.org/10.1603/0022-0493-93.6.1580
Received: 29 February 2000; Accepted: 1 July 2000; Published: 1 December 2000
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KEYWORDS
fitness cost
insecticide resistance
monogenic
polygenic
refuge
selection
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