Tolerance of entomopathogenic fungi Lecanicillium saksenae(Kushwaha) Kurihara and Sukarno and Lecanicillium lecanii (Zimm.) Zare and Gams to abiotic stress

dc.contributor.advisorReji Rani, O P
dc.contributor.authorTejaswi G Gowda.
dc.date.accessioned2024-03-19T11:39:23Z
dc.date.available2024-03-19T11:39:23Z
dc.date.issued2022-11-09
dc.description.abstractThe study entitled “Tolerance of entomopathogenic fungi Lecanicillium saksenae (Kushwaha) Kurihara and Sukarno and Lecanicillium lecanii (Zimm.) Zare and Gams to abiotic stress” was conducted at Department of Agricultural Entomology, College of Agriculture, Vellayani, Thiruvananthapuram, during the period 2017-22. The objective of study was to assess the tolerance level of L. saksenae and L. lecanii to insecticides, fungicides, temperature and UV radiation and explore the possibilities of developing tolerant strains. Results of the experiment to study the tolerance of L. saksenae and L. lecanii to insecticides revealed that the new generation insecticides viz., flubendiamide 39.35% SC, chlorantraniliprole 18.5% SC, imidacloprid 17.8% SL and thiamethoxam 25% WG were compatible with both the fungi in half dose, recommended dose and double the recommended doses. Among the old generation insecticides, only dimethoate 30% EC was found to be compatible at half and recommended doses. Malathion 50% EC, quinalphos 25% EC and chlorpyrifos 20% EC were found to be toxic to both the fungi at all the test doses. Among all the insecticides quinalphos 25% EC was found to be highly toxic with a Biological Index (BI) of 14 to 22. Among the fungicides tested, azoxystrobin 23% SC was found to be compatible with L. saksenae and it was moderately toxic to L. lecanii. Copper oxychloride 50% WP was found to be moderately toxic to L. lecanii and toxic to L. saksenae. Carbendazim 50 % WP, mancozeb 75% WP, hexaconazole 5% EC and tebuconazole 25 % EC were found to be toxic to both the fungi based on BI values. Artificial selection to induce tolerance to incompatible insecticides and fungicides was attempted by subculturing fungi in respective poisoned media for ten successive generations. No improved strain could be developed for quinalphos tolerance in both the fungi. Induction of fungicide tolerance resulted in two tolerant 183 strains in L. saksenae but no improved strain could be developed in L. lecanii. Hexaconazole tolerant strain of L. saksenae was able to tolerate the recommended field dose (0.15 %). Carbendazim tolerant strain exhibited increase in growth, sporulation and germination at the recommended dose (0.2%) compared to those in the non-selected culture. REP-PCR data revealed the genotypic variation of the strains. The variation quantified based on Jaccard’s coefficient analysis revealed that carbendazim tolerant strain and hexaconazole tolerant strain were 42 per cent and 38 per cent dissimilar from mother culture. Temperature tolerance study carried out at varying regimes of 30, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40 oC (8h exposure) revealed that increase in temperature significantly affected the growth parameters of both the fungi. Growth of L. lecanii and L. saksenae was completely inhibited at 36 and 40 oC, respectively. In terms of sporulation, no exponential reduction (>10 7 spores mL-1 ) was observed till 34 o C in L. saksenae, while in L. lecanii it was reduced to 105 spores mL-1 and it was terminated at 36 oC. Comparative tolerance between the species revealed that L. saksenae performed better than L. lecanii. No significant reduction (<15 per cent) in terms of germination was observed in L. saksenae till 36 oC, while in L. lecanii more than 70 per cent reduction was observed at 34 oC. L. saksenae spores were able to germinate till 40 oC while in L. lecanii germination was completely inhibited at this temperature. Attempts to induce temperature tolerance by subculturing the fungi at highest tolerant temperature for ten generations did not yield any tolerant strain. UV tolerance study conducted with two irradiances wave length viz., UVA - 365 nm and UVB - 290 to 315 nm for 10, 20, 30 min, 1h, 2h, 3h and 4h exposure durations, revealed that the growth of both the fungi was not significantly affected when exposed for shorter durations (10, 20 and 30 min), whereas when exposed for longer durations (1, 2, 3 and 4h), there was significant reduction in growth. In both the wave lengths and across the exposure durations, L. saksenae exhibited higher colony growth than L. lecanii. In UVA irradiance, the growth reduction ranged 184 between 13 to 75 per cent in L. saksenae and it was 23 to 81 per cent in L. lecanii. In UVB irradiance, colony reduction was between 12 to 85 per cent in L. saksenae and 31to 89 per cent in L. lecanii. In terms of sporulation, no exponential reduction was observed in both the fungi. There was germination inhibition in both the fungi exposed to UVA and UVB irradiance. In shorter exposures, L. lecanii exhibited higher germination (30 to 51 per cent) while in longer exposures L. saksenae exhibited higher germination (13 to 16 per cent). UV mutagenesis resulted in two UV mutants one each in L. saksenae and L. lecanii. L. lecanii mutant was named as LlUVM1 and L. saksenae mutant was named as LsUVM. Both the mutants were superior in terms of growth parameters when tested under UVA and UVB irradiance when compared to their mother culture. The REP-PCR analysis revealed that UV mutants LsUVM and LlUVM1 varied genotypically from the mother culture. Based on Jaccard’s coefficient there was 32 per cent dissimilarity with their respective mother cultures. Bioassay carried out to study the effect of artificial selection on the pathogenicity of fungicide tolerant strains of L. saksenae on rice bug Leptocorisa oratorius Fab. revealed that spore suspensions of carbendazim and hexaconazole tolerant strains of L. saksenae (107 spores mL -1 ) in the presence of respective fungicide, exhibited higher virulence than the mother culture. Mortality caused by the tank mix formulation of carbendazim tolerant strain + 0.2 % carbendazim 50 % WP caused 86.67 per cent mortality, while its mother culture resulted in 36.67 per cent mortality. Hexaconazole tolerant strain caused 60 per cent mortality while the mother culture did not cause mortality with tank mix of hexaconazole 5 % EC 0.15 %. Pathogenicity assay of L. saksenae UV mutant revealed that there was no significant difference in mortality of L. oratorius between the mother culture and the mutant. In L. lecanii the UV mutant (LlUVM1) exhibited higher virulence on the 185 brinjal mealybug, Coccidohystrix insolita Green. LlUVM1 caused 100 per cent mortality on the eighth day, while the mother culture of L. lecanii caused 83.75 per cent mortality. Therefore, the study concludes that the indigenous isolate L. saksenae is comparatively more tolerant to insecticides, temperature and UV exposure than L. lecanii. Strains of L. saksenae developed for carbendazim and hexaconazole tolerance performed better in terms of phenotypic characters. Genotypically, they expressed variation of 42 and 38 per cent respectively from mother culture. The UV tolerant strain developed in both the species were superior to the mother culture under UV irradiance. The findings pave way to the utilization of the indigenous isolate of L. saksenae and its fungicide tolerant mutants and the UV mutant of L. lecanii in pest management as they can combat abiotic stress in prevailing climatic conditions.
dc.identifier.urihttps://krishikosh.egranth.ac.in/handle/1/5810207561
dc.language.isoEnglish
dc.pages189p.
dc.publisherDepartment of Agricultural Entomology, College of Agriculture, Vellayani
dc.subAgricultural Entomology
dc.themeThe study entitled “Tolerance of entomopathogenic fungi Lecanicillium saksenae (Kushwaha) Kurihara and Sukarno and Lecanicillium lecanii (Zimm.) Zare and Gams to abiotic stress” was conducted at Department of Agricultural Entomology, College of Agriculture, Vellayani, Thiruvananthapuram, during the period 2017-22.
dc.these.typePh.D
dc.titleTolerance of entomopathogenic fungi Lecanicillium saksenae(Kushwaha) Kurihara and Sukarno and Lecanicillium lecanii (Zimm.) Zare and Gams to abiotic stress
dc.typeThesis
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
175579.pdf
Size:
11.13 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.71 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description:
Collections