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The effect of carbon dioxide gas alone or in combinations on the mortality of Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) and T. confusum du Val (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae)
Authors:M Taskeen Aliniazee
Affiliation:

Department of Entomology, University of California, Riverside, California, U.S.A.

Abstract:Adults of Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) and T. confusum du Val exposed to various mixtures of N2 or He and O2 were killed when the O2 concentration reached to 1·7% or below, whereas the adults exposed to CO2 : O2 mixtures were killed mostly due to the deleterious effects of CO2 itself. At 26·7°C and 38 ± 6%r.h., 95 per cent mortality of T. confusum adults was obtained by an exposure of 271 hr to 45% CO2 : 55% air mixture; 58 hr to 62% CO2 : 38% air mixture; and 47·5 hr to 80% CO2 : 20% air mixture, while for T. castaneum adults 95 per cent mortality required 192, 60, and 44 hr respectively. Data obtained by exposing mature and immature stages of both species to 100% CO2 suggest that adults were the most susceptible, followed by larvae, eggs and pupae. Generally speaking, inactive stages (egg and pupal) were more tolerant to CO2 than active stages (larval and adult). Increasing the temperature from 15·6° to 26·7°C resulted in increased insect mortalities; the degree of response varying in different stages. Increasing r.h. decreased the susceptibility of adult insects to 100% CO2.

Under airtight conditions 200 adult T. castaneum with 8 g of food medium sealed in 1·2 1. glass flasks depleted the O2 supply from 20·9% to a critical 1·7% level in 7 days, and adults of T. confusum depleted to the 1·6% level in 5 days of airtightness, and both species produced about 20% of carbon dioxide gas.

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