Control of pest ants by pathogenic fungi: state of the art
Pest ants are known for their damage to biodiversity, harm to agriculture, and negative impact on human welfare. Ants thrive when environmental opportunities arise, becoming pests and/or invading non-native areas. As social insects, they are extremely difficult to control using sustainable methods l...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Frontiers in fungal biology 2023-10, Vol.4, p.1199110-1199110 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Pest ants are known for their damage to biodiversity, harm to agriculture, and negative impact on human welfare. Ants thrive when environmental opportunities arise, becoming pests and/or invading non-native areas. As social insects, they are extremely difficult to control using sustainable methods like biological control. The latter, although safer to the environment, acts slowly allowing the ants to use their individual and social defenses. Among biocontrol agents, fungal pathogens were proposed as promising, however, it is difficult to ascertain their success when the bibliography has not been reviewed and condensed. Therefore, this paper is the first in performing such task by analyzing publications mainly from 2000 to 2022 about the control of pest ants by fungi. From 85 publications selected, 77% corresponded to laboratory studies.
Beauveria
and
Metarhizium
were the genera most used in laboratory and field studies. Most of them included
Acromyrmex
and
Atta
leaf-cutter ants (LCA), and
Solenopsis
fire ants. From laboratory experiments, we evaluated how ant net mortality was affected by ant and fungal species, and also by origin, concentration, and inoculation technique of the fungal strains tested.
Beauveria bassiana
and
Metarhizium anisopliae
produced the greatest mortality, along with the inoculation spray technique and fungal strains collected from ants. There was a positive relationship between ant mortality and fungal concentration only for those studies which evaluated more than one concentration. Twenty field experimental studies were found, covering 13 pest species, mainly LCA and
Solenopsis invicta
. Only
B. bassiana
was tested on
Solenopsis
,
M. anisopliae
was mostly used for
Acromyrmex
, and
M. anisopliae
or
Trichoderma
were mainly used with
Atta
species. The median control field efficiency varied from 20% to 85% for different fungi and ant genera. When grouping all fungal species together, the median control efficiency seemed to be better for
Acromyrmex
(67%) than for
Atta
and
Solenopsis
(both 43%). Our review shows that, at this stage of knowledge, it is very difficult to extrapolate any result. We offer suggestions to improve and standardize laboratory and field experimental studies in order to advance more efficiently in the fungal control of pest ants. |
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ISSN: | 2673-6128 2673-6128 |
DOI: | 10.3389/ffunb.2023.1199110 |