DIETARY SILVER NANOPARTICLES REDUCE FITNESS IN A BENEFICIAL, BUT NOT PEST, INSECT SPECIES

Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) have antimicrobial and insecticidal properties and they have been considered for their potential use as insecticides. While they do, indeed, kill some insects, two broader issues have not been considered in a critical way. First, reports of insect‐lethal AgNPs are often...

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Published inArchives of insect biochemistry and physiology Vol. 93; no. 4; pp. 190 - 201
Main Authors Afrasiabi, Zahra, Popham, Holly J.R., Stanley, David, Suresh, Dhananjay, Finley, Kristen, Campbell, Jonelle, Kannan, Raghuraman, Upendran, Anandhi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.12.2016
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) have antimicrobial and insecticidal properties and they have been considered for their potential use as insecticides. While they do, indeed, kill some insects, two broader issues have not been considered in a critical way. First, reports of insect‐lethal AgNPs are often based on simplistic methods that yield nanoparticles of nonuniform shapes and sizes, leaving questions about the precise treatments test insects experienced. Second, we do not know how AgNPs influence beneficial insects. This work addresses these issues. We assessed the influence of AgNPs on life history parameters of two agricultural pest insect species, Heliothis virescens (tobacco budworm) and Trichoplusia ni (cabbage looper) and a beneficial predatory insect species, Podisus maculiventris (spined soldier bug), all of which act in agroecosystems. Rearing the two pest species on standard media amended with AgNPs led to negligible influence on developmental times, pupal weights, and adult emergence, however, they led to retarded development, reductions in adult weight and fecundity, and increased mortality in the predator. These negative effects on the beneficial species, if also true for other beneficial insect species, would have substantial negative implications for continued development of AgNPs for insect pest management programs.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-8RNT6CNM-S
istex:96CC370AE0D480D68582FFFD08FA35353088A2F7
ArticleID:ARCH21351
USDA - No. 2011-02535
Grant sponsor: USDA‐NIFA Capacity Building Grant Afrasiabi‐2011‐02535.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0739-4462
1520-6327
DOI:10.1002/arch.21351