4.3 Article

Ecological aspects of an isolate of Steinernema diaprepesi (Rhabditida: Steinernematidae) from Argentina

Journal

BIOCONTROL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 6, Pages 690-704

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09583157.2014.890171

Keywords

entomopathogenic nematode; Steinernema diaprepesi; ecology; biological control

Funding

  1. programme Curso de Accion para la Investigacion y el Desarrollo, CAI+D, of the Universidad Nacional del Litoral

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Ecological aspects of Steinernema diaprepesi isolate SRC were studied to evaluate the species potential as biological control agent of insect pests. Under laboratory conditions, the following aspects were determined: the nematode life cycle, pathogenicity to several arthropods, reproductive capacity, tolerance to desiccation, effect of temperature on survival and infectivity of infective juveniles (IJs), and influence of soil texture and soil water potential on the isolate. The parasitic cycle on last-instar larvae of Galleria mellonella at 25 degrees C was completed 8 days after infection. The nematode showed high virulence to lepidopteran larvae, being limited or nil in the remaining orders of arthropods evaluated. An acceptable offspring production of S. diaprepesi was confirmed in the species G. mellonella and S. frugiperda, suggesting that the isolate would have potential for control of lepidopteran larvae. Optimum temperature for reproduction was 20-25 degrees C. IJs survived exposure to a range of temperatures between 10 and 40 degrees C, with a significant reduction in the number of live IJs at 40 degrees C. The nematodes remained infective at 20-40 degrees C. IJ mortality was 100% on day 6 of exposure to 85% RH. The movement of IJs observed in the soil column experiments revealed that the isolate uses a cruiser-type search strategy. Soil texture and water potential significantly influenced IJ movement, search and penetration of G. mellonella larvae. The efficacy of this isolate was found to be favoured in sandy soils, regardless of the soil water potential.

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