Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5769761 Scientia Horticulturae 2017 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•In Venezuela, fungus gnats have turned into a hard pest to control in the last years.•Heterorhabditis amazonensis proved to be infective at 20 °C to fungus gnat in laboratory conditions.•3 million nematodes after casing produced 44% more mushroom compared with chemical control in commercial farms.•Entomopathogenic nematodes could be an economical alternative to control fungus gnats in Venezuela.

Sciarids from the genus Bradysia have gained attention due to their damaging presence in many protected crops in both temperate and tropical environments. In Venezuela, these flies called “fungus gnat” have turned into a hard pest to control in mushroom facilities, due to restrictions on the usage of chemical product after setting the casing layer and during the fructification period. For these reasons, we evaluated the use of native entomopathogenic nematodes as biological control agents to control Bradysia difformis in both laboratory and field conditions. Different Venezuelan nematode species or isolates were tested using fungus gnat larvae in laboratory condition, of which Heterorhabditis amazonensis (LPV-498) was the best performer at low temperatures. The nematodes were then tested in commercial mushroom farms using different dosses and application times. In the present work, H. amazonensis demonstrated that bags treated with nematodes, produced more mushrooms per bag than those treated with the normal chemical protocols. The highest production was reached when 3 million nematodes were applied after setting the casing layer, with 3766 ± 1004 g of harvested mushrooms per bag, an 44% increase of mushroom yield of compared with bags treated only with chemical products.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Horticulture
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