Location: Southern Insect Management Research
Title: Effects of Beauveria bassiana on the growth and reproductive rates of Nezara viridulaAuthor
Portilla, Maribel | |
Tertuliano, Moukaram | |
Parys, Katherine | |
Reddy, Gadi V.P. | |
Glover, James |
Submitted to: BioControl
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal Publication Acceptance Date: 4/4/2024 Publication Date: 5/7/2024 Citation: Portilla, M., Tertuliano, M., Parys, K.A., Reddy, G.V., Glover, J.P. 2024. Effects of Beauveria bassiana on the growth and reproductive rates of Nezara viridula. BioControl. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-024-10258-1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-024-10258-1 Interpretive Summary: The southern green stink bug (SGSB) is a pest of considerable economical interest that are spread in tropical and subtropical regions that causes severe damage to many agronomically important crops. In the Southern United States (US) and other countries its control relies heavily upon insecticides, which has causes issues with pesticide resistance and population resurgences. This paper examined the effect of two strains of Beauveria bassiana (one commercial and one native) on the growth and reproductive rates of SGSB populations exposed to four concentrations of the pathogenic fungi. The collected data permitted the calculation functions of demographic parameters, which were computed over adult’s entire life. The growth and reproductive rate and demographic parameter values of SGSB were gradually affected when the concentrations of the native strain were increasing, while for the commercial strain only the high concentration affect the growth rates of SGSB populations. Technical Abstract: This study followed up previous research that used a laboratory colony of the southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula L. (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) to evaluate the effect of two strains of Beauveria bassiana (Balsamo-Crivelli) Vuillemin (Hypocreales: Cordycipitaceae) on fecundity and female and male susceptibility using four concentrations (106, 107, 108, and 109 spores/g) of native (NI8) and commercial (GHA) entomopathogenic fungi alongside a water-control [1]. The present study used cumulative oviposition and survival of those nine populations to calculate the demo-graphic parameters of this insect. Two computations were done based on total offspring and eggs with developed embryo only. Net reproductive rates (Ro) on populations sprayed with NI8 calcu-ated based on total offspring were gradually affected (72.55, 85.50, 58.15, and 37,60 females/newborn female) compared with water-control (87.65). Populations sprayed with GHA, only the highest concentration (109) was lower than control (27.15). The calculated Ro values based on fertile egg were much lower as expected with 60.75, 61.45, 45.45, and 32.05 females/newborn female from lowest to highest concentrations of NI8 and 21.50 for GHA highest concentration compared with water-control (78.45). These results demonstrated that both native and commercial strains affected embryo development that decreased growth and reproductive rates of N. viridula populations. |