Allee Effect in the Infection Dynamics of the Entomopathogenic Fungus Beauveria bassiana (Bals) Vuill. on the Beetle, Mylabris pustulata

Successful infection by Beauveria bassiana as with all other entomopathogenic fungi, is accomplished only at a high conidial dose while, theoretically, a single conidium should be sufficient. Indeed, this is a major deterrent in its use as a biocontrol agent. High pathogen load for infection is requ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mycopathologia (1975) 2006-06, Vol.161 (6), p.385-394
Hauptverfasser: Uma Devi, K, Uma Maheswara Rao, C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Successful infection by Beauveria bassiana as with all other entomopathogenic fungi, is accomplished only at a high conidial dose while, theoretically, a single conidium should be sufficient. Indeed, this is a major deterrent in its use as a biocontrol agent. High pathogen load for infection is required by organisms which display 'Allee' effect. In such organisms, a threshold exists for pathogen dose, below which no infection can be caused. B. bassiana has a semelparous life cycle and, therefore, its infection dynamics are expected to conform to the mass action principle with a linear relationship between dose and successful infection observable as mortality of the insect. Whether the need for a high conidial dose to induce insect mortality by B. bassiana is due to the operation of Allee effect was examined. A sample of 34 isolates was bioassayed on Mylabris pustulata (Coleoptera: Meloidae) at four conidial concentrations. With more than half of the isolates in the sample, the lowest dose tested (10(4) conidia/insect) did not cause insect mortality. Thus, a threshold pathogen load is required to cause successful infection. In these isolates, the dose-mortality relationship was sigmoid. Allee effect is thus identified in the infection dynamics of B. bassiana-M. pustulata system. The isolates that induced mortality at the lowest dose tested are concluded to be highly virulent with a lower threshold dose required for successful infection. With some isolates, at high conidial dose, the infection rate decreased either due to a decrease in the proportion of insects showing mycosis, to the speed of death, or both. Such a response could result from intra scramble competition arising from overload of pathogen at very high dose.
ISSN:0301-486X
1573-0832
DOI:10.1007/s11046-006-0020-2