Evaluation of radiation sensitivity and mating performance of Glossina brevipalpis males

PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2017 Mar 17;11(3):e0005473. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005473. eCollection 2017 Mar.

Abstract

Background: Area-wide integrated pest management strategies that include a sterile insect technique component have been successfully used to eradicate tsetse fly populations in the past. To ensure the success of the sterile insect technique, the released males must be adequately sterile and be able to compete with their native counterparts in the wild.

Methodology/principal findings: In the present study the radiation sensitivity of colonised Glossina brevipalpis Newstead (Diptera; Glossinidae) males, treated either as adults or pupae, was assessed. The mating performance of the irradiated G. brevipalpis males was assessed in walk-in field cages. Glossina brevipalpis adults and pupae were highly sensitive to irradiation, and a dose of 40 Gy and 80 Gy induced 93% and 99% sterility respectively in untreated females that mated with males irradiated as adults. When 37 to 41 day old pupae were exposed to a dose of 40 Gy, more than 97% sterility was induced in untreated females that mated with males derived from irradiated pupae. Males treated as adults with a dose up to 80 Gy were able to compete successfully with untreated fertile males for untreated females in walk-in field cages.

Conclusions/significance: The data emanating from this field cage study indicates that, sterile male flies derived from the colony of G. brevipalpis maintained at the Agricultural Research Council-Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute in South Africa are potential good candidates for a campaign that includes a sterile insect technique component. This would need to be confirmed by open field studies.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Infertility, Male
  • Male
  • Radiation Tolerance*
  • Sexual Behavior, Animal*
  • South Africa
  • Tsetse Flies / physiology*
  • Tsetse Flies / radiation effects*

Grants and funding

The Research was done in collaboration with the Joint Food and Agriculture Organization/International Atomic Energy Agency Division of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture under the coordinated research project 17753/R0. The funders approved a detailed study design and had no further role in data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.