Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects

Muskat LC, Görg LM, Humbert P, Gross J, Eilenberg J, Patel A (Accepted)
Pest Management Science.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Angenommen | Englisch
 
Download
Es wurden keine Dateien hochgeladen. Nur Publikationsnachweis!
Autor*in
Muskat, Linda C.; Görg, Louisa M.; Humbert, Pascal; Gross, Jürgen; Eilenberg, Jørgen; Patel, AnantUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
Background Pandora sp. nov. inedit. (Entomophthorales: Entomophthoraceae) (ARSEF 13372) is a recently isolated entomophthoralean fungus with potential for psyllid pest control. This study aimed to develop a formulation based on biocompatible hydrogel beads in order to transfer the fungus into an easily applicable form and to test the effects on psyllids. Results After encapsulation in calcium alginate beads, Pandora sp. nov. grew from the beads and discharged conidia over 12 days under optimal humidity conditions at 18 °C. Conidial number was increased 2.95-fold by the addition of skimmed milk as nutritional formulation adjuvant to the beads. The virulence of the encapsulated fungus was assessed with the two target psyllid species; the summer apple psyllid, Cacopsylla picta and the pear psyllid, Cacopsylla pyri. Beads containing skimmed milk as nutritional adjuvant led to the highest mortalities (48.3% on C. picta and 75.0 % on C. pyri). In a second bioassay, survival time of C. pyri exposed to beads containing different concentration (10, 20 or 40%) of Pandora sp. nov. was tested. The survival time of C. pyri was significantly reduced when exposed to beads containing 10% or 20% Pandora sp. nov. The median survival time was reached after 5-6 days past inoculation and the cumulative mortality for C. pyri treated with Pandora sp. nov. beads showed up to 89% mortality. Conclusion The promising results of this study will ease the way for large-scale field application of a novel Pandora species in biological psyllid pest control.
Erscheinungsjahr
2021
Zeitschriftentitel
Pest Management Science
ISSN
1526-498X
eISSN
1526-4998
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2959066

Zitieren

Muskat LC, Görg LM, Humbert P, Gross J, Eilenberg J, Patel A. Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects. Pest Management Science. Accepted.
Muskat, L. C., Görg, L. M., Humbert, P., Gross, J., Eilenberg, J., & Patel, A. (Accepted). Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects. Pest Management Science. https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.6710
Muskat, Linda C., Görg, Louisa M., Humbert, Pascal, Gross, Jürgen, Eilenberg, Jørgen, and Patel, Anant. Accepted. “Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects”. Pest Management Science.
Muskat, L. C., Görg, L. M., Humbert, P., Gross, J., Eilenberg, J., and Patel, A. (Accepted). Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects. Pest Management Science.
Muskat, L.C., et al., Accepted. Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects. Pest Management Science.
L.C. Muskat, et al., “Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects”, Pest Management Science, Accepted.
Muskat, L.C., Görg, L.M., Humbert, P., Gross, J., Eilenberg, J., Patel, A.: Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects. Pest Management Science. (Accepted).
Muskat, Linda C., Görg, Louisa M., Humbert, Pascal, Gross, Jürgen, Eilenberg, Jørgen, and Patel, Anant. “Encapsulation of the psyllid‐pathogenic fungus sp. nov. inedit. and experimental infection of target insects”. Pest Management Science (Accepted).
Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 34783145
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar