Sorption of tritiated phosphine by various stages of Tribolium castaneum (Herbst).

Abstract When various stages of Tribolium castaneum were fumigated with 0.14–1.69 mg/l of tritiated phosphine for 5 hr the uptake of the fumigant was found to be considerably greater in larvae and adults than in pupae or eggs. Mature larvae absorbed 2–3 times as much phosphine as pupae at all concentrations tested and mortality was appeciably higher. Uptake by 1-day-old adults was about two fold that of the mature pupal stage from which they had emerged and increased with age so that 14-day adults absorbed about twice as much as newly emerged adults. Uptake by pupae followed a U-shaped curve somewhat similar to the characteristic pattern of oxygen uptake by pupae of different ages. Eggs retained only a small proportion of the radioactive fumigant they absorbed. A considerable amount remained at the surface of the eggs and was converted to soluble compounds that could be washed off with water. The results suggest that the higher tolerance of both eggs and pupae to phosphine may, at least partially, be attributed to the lower uptake of fumigant as compared to larvae and adults.