Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2033388 | Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine | 2013 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Six indigenous B. thuringiensis isolates among the 33 bacterial isolates found in the Sawojajar and Purwantoro sub-districts were toxic to the third instar larvae of Ae. aegypti. The PWR4-32 isolates were identical to the reference B. thuringiensis and had 88% phenotype similarity. The PWR4-32 isolates had the highest spore prevalence (52.44%), and the early stationary phase occurred at 36 h. The PWR4-32 isolates were the most effective at killing Ae. aegypti larvae (LC50-72 h=2.3Ã108 cells/mL).
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Authors
Zulfaidah Penata Gama, Nobukazu Nakagoshi, Suharjono Suharjono, Faridah Setyowati,