Virulence of entomopathogenic nematodes, Steinernema carpocapsae and S. feltiae on Spodoptera exigua
Paper ID : 1132-3IICE (R1)
Authors:
hajar sharghi *1, Naser Eivazian Kary1, Davoud mohammadi2
1Department of Plant Protection, Faculty of Agriculture, Azarbaijan Shahid Madani University, Tabriz, IRAN
2department of Plant protection, Faculty of Agricul;ture,Azarbaijan ShahidMadani University
Abstract:
Entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) from the Steinernematidae and Heterorhabditidae families are obligate insect pathogens used as biological control agents against a broad spectrum of key pests. Regarding the economic importance of beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua, on extensive range of plants, virulence of two species of entomopathogenic nematodes including Steinernema feltiae and S. carpocapsae were tested in laboratory conditions on last instar larva. Beet armyworm is still mostly controlled using synthetic insecticides and effective alternatives to synthetic insecticides need to be developed to reduce the pressure for insecticide resistance development and to reduce negative effects of the insecticides on natural enemies of pests and other non-target organism including humans. The virulence of EPNs was evaluated in 6 cm diameter petri dishes lined with two filter papers. IJs were applied in 3 ml distilled water to the filter paper surface before the larvae was added to the petri dishes individually. Concentrations used were 2, 5, 10, 20 and 40 IJs/L (per larvae) for both EPNs. Untreated controls received only distilled water. Mortality was recorded daily for 6 days starting after 48 h. The experiment was conducted twice. The LC-values were calculated using Probit analysis. Mortality data were corrected for mortality in the untreated controls and subjected to analysis of variance followed by Duncan's mean separation test. Differences among means in all experiments were considered significant at P < 0.05. LC values for both EPNs had a good fit to the probit regression model. Spodoptera exigua last instar larvae were highly susceptible to both EPNs albeit S. feltiae proved more virulent than S. carpocapsae. After three days of exposure to IJs, larval mortality reached to highest level regarding both EPNs. Under S. feltiae treatment, the highest mortality rate was 93.33% (LC50 = 1.84 IJs/L; fiducial limit: 0.17- 3.81) and in the case of S. carpocapsae mortality reached 84.44% (8.52 IJs/L; fiducial limit: 4.66-14.68). The slope of dose-response curve was steeper for S. carpocapsae (1.74) compared to S. feltiae (1.11). Although these EPNs get benefit from somewhat different foraging strategies but due to small experimental arenas it doesn’t seem that LC differences is related to this behavior. Totally both EPNs appeared to be highly virulent to beet armyworm. Regarding considerable susceptibility of beet armyworm larvae to EPNs in laboratory, conducting the pot experiments followed by field studies and other complementary tests are proposed to evaluate their effectiveness under field conditions.
Keywords:
Bioassay, Infective juveniles, Laboratory condition, LC value
Status : Paper Accepted (Poster Presentation)