The big picture: using wildflower strips for pest control
Protecting Crops and the Environment
Martin has more than 20 years’ experience of studying the molecular mechanisms that cause insecticide resistance in insect pests. His work includes the identification and analysis of mutations that cause target site resistance within the insect voltage-gated sodium channel (pyrethroids), acetylcholinesterase (OP/carbamates), nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (neonicotinoids) and the ryanodine receptor (diamides). This work has involved several national/international collaborations with colleagues in university and industry, and it has resulted in more than 100 peer reviewed publications. He has laboratory experience of a range of molecular biology techniques, including the design and analysis of next generation sequencing projects, such as transcriptome sequencing. He maintains a close involvement in more applied aspects of these projects, including the design and field application of DNA-based assays for detecting and monitoring the frequency of individual resistance mutations in field populations. Examples include screening for pyrethroid, carbamate and neonicotinoid resistance in UK and European populations of the peach-potato aphid, and testing for pyrethroid resistance in cabbage stem flea beetles on oilseed rape.