Components of resistance to banana weevil (Cosmopolites sordidus) in Musa germplasm in Uganda

2006 
A field screening trial undertaken in Uganda showed that a number of Musa L. (Musaceae) cultivars and hybrids displayed high levels of resistance to banana weevil, Cosmopolites sordidus (Germar) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), while most highland banana cultivars tended to be susceptible to weevil attack. In this study, research was undertaken to determine modalities of resistance to banana weevil. Laboratory studies suggested that all cultivars were attractive to the weevil and that females freely oviposited on all cultivars. While some differences were found between cultivars in attractivity and egg numbers, these were not related to subsequent damage. Therefore, antixenosis does not appear to play an important role in host-plant resistance to banana weevil. Larval survivorship rates in living corms were, for the most part, low on resistant cultivars, suggesting that antibiosis mechanisms offer the primary avenues of resistance. In the laboratory, development was slower on some resistant cultivars although survivorship rates on excised corm material were not as well related to levels of resistance as that on living material. Sap appeared to play a minor role in reducing egg eclosion rates on some resistant cultivars. Methanol extracts from Kayinja, a resistant cultivar, inhibited larval development on corms of susceptible cultivars in the laboratory.
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