Does population density influence fluctuating asymmetry of Sitophilus oryzae laboratory populations?
Abstract
The rice weevil, Sitophilus oryzae, is one of the most pernicious pests of stored grain. It is a primary pest and causes a reduction in weight, quality, seed viability and commercial value of various cereals. For this study, we reared S. oryzae on wheat grains under two different adult densities, low and high, with an aim to assess the influence of population density on fluctuating asymmetry of the adult’s ventral body. Fluctuating asymmetry represents slight and random deviations from bilateral symmetry normally distributed around a 0 mean, and its level is usually higher under a disturbed developmental process. Accordingly, we expected that environmental
stress caused by higher density would increase its level. Opposite to our hypothesis, the study showed that population density did not influence fluctuating asymmetry of S. oryzae adults. Both experimental populations exhibited a similar, non-significant level of fluctuating asymmetry.
Keywords:
fluctuating asymmetry / abundance / rice weevil / wheatSource:
Journal of Stored Products Research, 2023, 101, 102092-Publisher:
- Elsevier
Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200358 (BioSense Institute) (RS-200358)
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200032 (Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, Novi Sad) (RS-200032)
- ANTARES - Centre of Excellence for Advanced Technologies in Sustainable Agriculture and Food Security (EU-739570)
Note:
- The work has been carried out within the Centre of Excellence for Innovations in Breeding of Climate-Resilient Crops – ClimateCrops.
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Institution/Community
FiVeRTY - JOUR AU - Ačanski, Jelena AU - Gvozdenac, Sonja AU - Radenković, Marko PY - 2023 UR - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/3322 AB - The rice weevil, Sitophilus oryzae, is one of the most pernicious pests of stored grain. It is a primary pest and causes a reduction in weight, quality, seed viability and commercial value of various cereals. For this study, we reared S. oryzae on wheat grains under two different adult densities, low and high, with an aim to assess the influence of population density on fluctuating asymmetry of the adult’s ventral body. Fluctuating asymmetry represents slight and random deviations from bilateral symmetry normally distributed around a 0 mean, and its level is usually higher under a disturbed developmental process. Accordingly, we expected that environmental stress caused by higher density would increase its level. Opposite to our hypothesis, the study showed that population density did not influence fluctuating asymmetry of S. oryzae adults. Both experimental populations exhibited a similar, non-significant level of fluctuating asymmetry. PB - Elsevier T2 - Journal of Stored Products Research T1 - Does population density influence fluctuating asymmetry of Sitophilus oryzae laboratory populations? SP - 102092 VL - 101 DO - 10.1016/j.jspr.2023.102092 ER -
@article{ author = "Ačanski, Jelena and Gvozdenac, Sonja and Radenković, Marko", year = "2023", abstract = "The rice weevil, Sitophilus oryzae, is one of the most pernicious pests of stored grain. It is a primary pest and causes a reduction in weight, quality, seed viability and commercial value of various cereals. For this study, we reared S. oryzae on wheat grains under two different adult densities, low and high, with an aim to assess the influence of population density on fluctuating asymmetry of the adult’s ventral body. Fluctuating asymmetry represents slight and random deviations from bilateral symmetry normally distributed around a 0 mean, and its level is usually higher under a disturbed developmental process. Accordingly, we expected that environmental stress caused by higher density would increase its level. Opposite to our hypothesis, the study showed that population density did not influence fluctuating asymmetry of S. oryzae adults. Both experimental populations exhibited a similar, non-significant level of fluctuating asymmetry.", publisher = "Elsevier", journal = "Journal of Stored Products Research", title = "Does population density influence fluctuating asymmetry of Sitophilus oryzae laboratory populations?", pages = "102092", volume = "101", doi = "10.1016/j.jspr.2023.102092" }
Ačanski, J., Gvozdenac, S.,& Radenković, M.. (2023). Does population density influence fluctuating asymmetry of Sitophilus oryzae laboratory populations?. in Journal of Stored Products Research Elsevier., 101, 102092. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jspr.2023.102092
Ačanski J, Gvozdenac S, Radenković M. Does population density influence fluctuating asymmetry of Sitophilus oryzae laboratory populations?. in Journal of Stored Products Research. 2023;101:102092. doi:10.1016/j.jspr.2023.102092 .
Ačanski, Jelena, Gvozdenac, Sonja, Radenković, Marko, "Does population density influence fluctuating asymmetry of Sitophilus oryzae laboratory populations?" in Journal of Stored Products Research, 101 (2023):102092, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jspr.2023.102092 . .