Factory and field technologies, advancing together, may put a friendly
fungus in the forefront of a new bioinsecticide service industry.
Growers of high-value horticultural and vegetable crops could be the first
to benefit from Agricultural Research
Service work with industry to mobilize the microbe Paecilomyces
fumosoroseus against silverleaf and greenhouse whiteflies.
Technologies for mass-culturing P. fumosoroseus may later be adapted
to different fungi suited to protecting turf grasses from insects. Companies
that provide care for lawns and golf courses could then apply more
environmentally friendly pest controls. Such services may have special appeal
to families with young children or pets.
"The idea is to produce and dry fungi in a factory and parcel them to
portable fermentors at field sites where they can be rejuvenated, multiplied,
and applied through spray or irrigation systems," says Mark A. Jackson. He
is a microbiologist at ARS' National Center for Agricultural Utilization
Research (NCAUR) in Peoria, Illinois.
The scientists use a portable fermentor patented by Eco Soil Systems, Inc.,
of San Diego, California, under a 3-year cooperative research and development
agreement begun last summer. Eco Soil technicians now use the fermentation
system, called BioJect, to produce fresh batches of nitrogen-fixing bacteria
for application through irrigation sprinklers to make golf course grass greener
and healthier.
In the beginning stages of his research on P. fumosoroseus, Jackson
modified deep-tank fermentation technology developed by NCAUR a half century
ago. The technology originally launched an arsenal of antibiotics against human
disease, beginning with penicillin. Since applying for a patent about 3 years
ago, Jackson and his colleagues have steadily improved mass spore production of
P. fumosoroseus, doubling the number of spores produced in a tank and
cutting fermentation time from 3 days to less than 2. Along the way, they
developed fermentation mixtures that are more economical than the precisely
defined recipes used earlier.
"Our main goal has been to produce spores that will do their job
dependably in the greenhouse and in the field," says Jackson.
For factory-produced fungi to become commercially viable, even for use in
portable fermentors, large and predictable numbers of healthy spores must be
produced months in advance. The spores should survive freeze-drying and
long-term storage. In recent laboratory studies, the scientists found about 75
percent of freeze-dried spores remained alive after 5 months of storage.
To further lower bioinsecticide costs, scientists are defining conditions
that allow the fungus to multiply rapidly in portable fermentors. After small
packages of well-maintained, freeze-dried spores are mixed with nutrients in
the fermentors, the spores spring vigorously from their Rip Van Winkle state
and multiply 100- to 1,000-fold. These fresh, active spores produced on site
can be sprayed directly on the crop to infect and kill whiteflies.
As research with Eco Soil Systems progresses, Jackson plans to inoculate
BioJect fermentors at several ARS locations and commercial field sites. His
research on control of whiteflies with P. fumosoroseus also involves
collaboration with other industrial and academic scientists in Mexico, Spain,
and the United States.--By Ben
Hardin, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
Mark A. Jackson is at the
USDA-ARS
National Center for Agricultural
Utilization Research, 1815 N. University St., Peoria, IL 61604; phone (309)
681-6283, fax (309) 681-6427.
"Deep-Tank Fermentation" was
published in the January 1999 issue
of Agricultural Research magazine.