11 research outputs found
A semi-synthetic chickpea flour based diet for long-term maintenance of laboratory culture of helicoverpa armigera
Artificial rearing of insects in the laboratory is a pre-requisite for undertaking studies on insecticide/
biopesticide bioassays, and evaluation of germplasm, segregating breeding material, mapping populations,
and transgenic plants for resistance to insects. For successful rearing of insects in the laboratory, there is
need for standardizing a semi-synthetic diet that supports survival and development of the insect for
several generations. We tested different semi-‘synthetic diets for rearing the legume pod borer, Helicoverpa
armigera for two generations under laboratory conditions. All the semi-synthetic diets tested supported
the growth and development of H. armigera up to adult emergence, but there were significant differences
in survival and development and fecundity on different diets. The highest larval survival was observed in
the wheatgerm based diet in first (97.5%) and second generation (93.5%), followed by chickpea based
modified diet (93.75% survival in both the generations). The lowest larval weights (270.7 and 283.7 mg)
were recorded in the tapioca granules diet in 1st and 2nd generation, respectively. The adult emergence
ranged from 68.7 to 83.3%, and 60.4 to 81.2% in the 1st and 2nd generation, respectively. Least fecundity
was observed in the tapioca granules based diet (422 and 603 eggs per female) in both the generations,
but the differences were not significant. Complete or partial replacement of agar-agar with tapioca
granules was not suitable for use in artificial diets. The results indicated that modified chickpea flour
based diet was quite appropriate for rearing H. armigera under laboratory condition
C ASE REPORT Simultaneous occurrence of multiple myeloma and acute myeloid leukemia
ABSTRACT Multiple myeloma and acute leukemia may sometimes occur in the same patient, usually in patients with myeloma who receive chemotherapy and subsequently develop acute leukemia. However, simultaneous occurrence of myeloma and acute leukemia on presentation is rare, with only a handful of such cases reported in the literature