Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4505399 | Biological Control | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Neozygites tanajoae is a very specialized fungus pathogenic to the cassava green mite (CGM), Mononychellus tanajoa, an important cassava pest introduced to Africa from the Neotropics. Conidial discharge from cadavers of CGM that died from infections with 14 isolates of N. tanajoae collected from diverse climates of Brazil was quantified to help select potential candidate strains for introduction to Africa. Studies aimed to identify isolates with lower requirements for relative humidity for sporulation and isolates that discharged more conidia during short periods of moisture. At 96 ± 0.5% RH, production of conidia was variable and even isolates from the Brazilian semi-arid region, e.g., Petrolina and Itaberaba, produced few conidia. Significant differences in the numbers of conidia produced by diverse Brazilian isolates were observed after 6, 9 and 12 h at 100% RH. At 100% RH, production of primary conidia increased considerably from an average of 57 ± 4 conidia at 6 h to 509 ± 37 conidia at 12 h. The isolate sporulating least (BIN21) discharged only 45.7% of the number of conidia produced by isolate BIN1, one of the isolates producing the most spores. Results from this study demonstrate that differences in production of conidia among isolates should be considered when selecting Neozygites isolates for new biological control introductions.
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Authors
Italo Jr., Clarice G.B. Demétrio, Bryan F.J. Manly, Ann E. Hajek,