Soybean aphid (Aphis glycines Matsumura) is a pest of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr] in the Midwestern U.S. and southern Canada. Host plant resistance provides an alternative to insecticides for… Click to show full abstract
Soybean aphid (Aphis glycines Matsumura) is a pest of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr] in the Midwestern U.S. and southern Canada. Host plant resistance provides an alternative to insecticides for soybean aphid management. Soybean with Rag1 + Rag2 aphid resistance is available commercially but does not protect against soybean aphid biotype 4 colonization. To find sources of resistance to soybean aphid biotype 4, we turned to soybean’s progenitor Glycine soja (Sieb. and Zucc.). Twenty soja plant introductions (PIs) with previously identified resistance to avirulent soybean aphid biotype 1 were assessed in free-choice tests against biotype 4, followed by a no-choice test for promising PIs. Experiments were repeated using three soybean aphid biotype 4 colonies, collected from separate site-years (Lomira, WI 2013; Volga, SD 2015, 2016). Free-choice tests identified six, three, and eight soja PIs with putative resistance to Lomira13, Volga15, and Volga16 aphid colonies, respectively. No-choice tests identified six, two, and six soja PIs that continued to suppress Lomira13, Volga15, and Volga16 aphids, respectively. PI 65549 and PI 101404A were resistant to each of the three colonies of soybean aphid biotype 4 and may contribute to durable resistance against soybean aphid.
               
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