Spodoptera litura causes enormous losses in many economically important
crops. Three years monitoring of conventional and new chemistry
insecticides revealed chlorpyrifos, quinalphos, deltamethrin,
β-cyfluthrin, emamectin and indoxacarb more toxic than other
insecticides against most field populations. Cypermethrin and
deltamethrin with fipronil showed synergistic effect both at 1:1 and
1:10 in field populations. However, these populations were highly
antagonistic to organophosphates when mixed with synthetic pyrethroids.
Using single pair crosses for genetics studies, deltamethrin and
indoxacarb showed autosomal and incompletely dominant resistance
controlled by more than one locus. Enzyme inhibitors i.e., PBO and DEF
were significantly not different for both field populations suggesting
involvement of both mechanism of resistance. Timely judgment of pest
status, delimiting alternate host crops and weeds, wise rotation of
insecticides with new chemicals and insect growth regulators with
synergistic mixtures might be an asset for management of this insect
pest. Stability and dominance of resistance and cross-resistance suggest
use of insecticides with different modes of action.