Introduction
Pesticide resistance is the evolutionary response of pest populations to repeated chemical
selection pressure. It is not a future threat — it is a current crisis affecting crop protection across
the Mediterranean. Whitefly resistant to neonicotinoids, spider mites resistant to acaricides, and
fungal pathogens resistant to strobilurin fungicides are documented realities that reduce
management options and increase costs for farmers throughout Lebanon and the region.
Understanding the biology of resistance development is the first step toward managing it
effectively and preserving the chemical tools that remain functional.
How Resistance Develops
Within any pest population, natural genetic variation includes individuals with varying levels of
tolerance to pesticides. When a pesticide is applied, susceptible individuals die while tolerant
individuals survive and reproduce. Over successive generations — which can be as short as
two weeks for whitefly — the proportion of resistant individuals increases until the product no
longer provides commercial control.
The speed of resistance development depends on several factors: pest generation time (shorter
= faster resistance), the intensity of selection pressure (frequency and coverage of
applications), the availability of refugia (untreated areas where susceptible individuals survive),
and the genetic basis of resistance (single gene mutations develop faster than polygenic
resistance).
Current Resistance Status in Mediterranean Agriculture
Whitefly (Bemisia tabaci) — arguably the most damaging pest complex in Mediterranean
vegetable production — has developed resistance to organophosphates, pyrethroids,
neonicotinoids, and in some populations, newer chemistries. Spider mites show resistance to
multiple acaricide groups. Tuta absoluta has documented resistance to several insecticide
classes in areas of heavy use.
Fungal resistance is equally concerning. Botrytis cinerea resistance to multiple fungicide groups
is widespread in Mediterranean greenhouse production. Downy mildew populations in lettuce
and grape show reduced sensitivity to commonly used products.

Practical Resistance Management
Rotate between different modes of action as classified by IRAC (Insecticide Resistance Action
Committee) and FRAC (Fungicide Resistance Action Committee). Products with the same mode
of action number should be treated as equivalent regardless of brand name or active ingredient
name.
Reduce selection pressure through IPM — fewer applications mean slower resistance
development. Use biological control products that do not generate cross-resistance with
chemical tools. Apply at label rates — under-dosing is the single most effective accelerator of
resistance because it exposes pests to sub-lethal levels that favor survival of partially tolerant
individuals.
Maintain refugia — untreated areas or habitats where susceptible pest genotypes survive and
interbreed with resistant populations, diluting resistance genes. This principle is counterintuitive
but genetically sound.
Conclusion
Pesticide resistance is an arms race that farmers cannot win through escalation. Every new
chemical class faces the same evolutionary pressure that degraded its predecessors. The only
sustainable strategy is integrated management that minimizes selection pressure, preserves
susceptibility, and treats chemical tools as finite resources to be conserved.
Key Takeaways
- Resistance is genetic evolution driven by selection pressure — it is inevitable but
Manageable.
- Whitefly, spider mites, and Tuta absoluta show significant resistance across
Mediterranean farming regions.
- Mode-of-action rotation (IRAC/FRAC classification) is the cornerstone of resistance
management.
- Under-dosing accelerates resistance faster than any other factor — always apply at label
rates.