4.4 Article

Behavioural response of the fungus gnat, Bradysia impatiens (Diptera: Sciaridae) towards certain edible mushrooms and saprophytic fungi

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 145, Issue 5, Pages 458-466

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jen.12857

Keywords

Aspergillus flavus; life history; Mucor circinelloides; olfactory response; Pleurotus ostreatus; tropism

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [31872270]

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The fungus gnat Bradysia impatiens is attracted to the oyster mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus, with both males and females showing a preference for the Mucor circinelloides fungal strain over Aspergillus flavus. Female adults demonstrated the strongest attraction to the fungal strains, indicating potential for using M. circinelloides in a push-pull strategy for biocontrol in edible mushroom cultivation.
The fungus gnat Bradysia impatiens (Johannsen) is a worldwide pest inhabiting organic-rich environments, including mushroom-cultivation substrates, which leads to massive production losses of edible mushrooms. To promote a non-insecticidal pest control strategy, we evaluated adult behavioural response towards two saprophytic fungal strains Aspergillus flavus Link and Mucor circinelloides Tiegh., isolated from B. impatiens-inhabiting substrates and six edible mushrooms species. Our results indicated that (a) B. impatiens was most attracted to the oyster mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus among all six edible mushrooms; (b) males and females demonstrated a significant attraction for M. circinelloides over A. flavus and P. ostreatus; (c) adults demonstrated dynamic attraction tendencies that varied with the culture periods of A. flavus and M. circinelloides, wherein females represented most (mean = 78.6%) of the attracted individuals; and (d) larvae that fed on mycelial cultures of M. circinelloides could complete their entire life cycles, but larvae could not survive on a non-fungal or A. flavus diet. These results demonstrate the potential for the development of M. circinelloides in a push-pull strategy to biocontrol this pest in edible mushroom cultivation.

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