Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Resistance to chemical insecticides plus high morbidity rates have lead to rising interest in fungi as candidates for biocontrol agents of mosquito vectors. In most studies fungal infections have been induced by exposure of mosquitoe...

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Main Authors: Reyes-Villanueva Filiberto, Rodríguez-Pérez Mario A, Rebollar-Tellez Eduardo A, Garza-Hernández Javier A, García-Munguía Alberto M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-02-01
Series:Parasites & Vectors
Online Access:http://www.parasitesandvectors.com/content/4/1/24
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spelling doaj-a1ab0573be7341d3898b43e6c088f9c72020-11-24T23:22:44ZengBMCParasites & Vectors1756-33052011-02-01412410.1186/1756-3305-4-24Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoesReyes-Villanueva FilibertoRodríguez-Pérez Mario ARebollar-Tellez Eduardo AGarza-Hernández Javier AGarcía-Munguía Alberto M<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Resistance to chemical insecticides plus high morbidity rates have lead to rising interest in fungi as candidates for biocontrol agents of mosquito vectors. In most studies fungal infections have been induced by exposure of mosquitoes to various surfaces treated with conidia. In the present study eight Mexican strains of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>were assessed against <it>Aedes aegypti </it>by direct exposure of females to 6 × 10<sup>8 </sup>conidia ml <sup>-1 </sup>on a filter paper, afterwards, the transmission of the least and most virulent isolates was evaluated by mating behavior from virgin, fungus-contaminated male to females, to examine this ethological pattern as a new approach to deliver conidia against the dengue vector.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In an exposure chamber with a filter paper impregnated with 6 × 10<sup>8 </sup>conidia ml <sup>-1 </sup>of the least and most virulent strains of <it>B. bassiana</it>, 6-8 day old males of <it>A. aegypti </it>were exposed for 48 hours, and then transferred individually (each one was a replicate) to another chamber and confined with twenty healthy females of the same age. Clean males were used in controls. Survival, infection by true mating (insemination) or by mating attempts (no insemination) and fecundity were daily registered until the death of last female. Data analysis was conducted with proc glm for unbalanced experiments and means were separated with the Ryan test with SAS.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>All strains were highly virulent with LT<sub>50 </sub>ranging from 2.70 (± 0.29) to 5.33 (± 0.53) days. However the most (Bb-CBG2) and least virulent (Bb-CBG4) isolates were also transmitted by mating behavior; both killed 78-90% of females in 15 days after being confined with males that had previously been exposed for 48 hours to fungi. Of these mortality rates, 23 and 38% respectively, were infections acquired by copulations where insemination occurred. The LT<sub>50 </sub>for sexually-infected females were 7.92 (± 0.46) and 8.82 (± 0.45) days for both strains, while the one in control was 13.92 (± 0.58). Likewise, fecundity decreased by 95% and 60% for both Bb-CBG2 and Bb-CBG4 isolates in comparison with control. The role of mating attempts in this delivery procedure of <it>B. bassiana </it>is discussed.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This is the first report about transmission of <it>B. bassiana </it>by mating behavior from virgin, fungus-contaminated males to females in <it>A. aegypti</it>. Fungal infections acquired by this route (autodissemination) infringed high mortality rates (90%) in mated or approached females. However, prior to releasing virgin, fungus-contaminated males to spread <it>B. basasiana </it>among females of <it>A. aegypti</it>, this novel alternative needs further investigations.</p> http://www.parasitesandvectors.com/content/4/1/24
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Reyes-Villanueva Filiberto
Rodríguez-Pérez Mario A
Rebollar-Tellez Eduardo A
Garza-Hernández Javier A
García-Munguía Alberto M
spellingShingle Reyes-Villanueva Filiberto
Rodríguez-Pérez Mario A
Rebollar-Tellez Eduardo A
Garza-Hernández Javier A
García-Munguía Alberto M
Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
Parasites & Vectors
author_facet Reyes-Villanueva Filiberto
Rodríguez-Pérez Mario A
Rebollar-Tellez Eduardo A
Garza-Hernández Javier A
García-Munguía Alberto M
author_sort Reyes-Villanueva Filiberto
title Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
title_short Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
title_full Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
title_fullStr Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
title_full_unstemmed Transmission of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>Aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
title_sort transmission of <it>beauveria bassiana </it>from male to female <it>aedes aegypti </it>mosquitoes
publisher BMC
series Parasites & Vectors
issn 1756-3305
publishDate 2011-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Resistance to chemical insecticides plus high morbidity rates have lead to rising interest in fungi as candidates for biocontrol agents of mosquito vectors. In most studies fungal infections have been induced by exposure of mosquitoes to various surfaces treated with conidia. In the present study eight Mexican strains of <it>Beauveria bassiana </it>were assessed against <it>Aedes aegypti </it>by direct exposure of females to 6 × 10<sup>8 </sup>conidia ml <sup>-1 </sup>on a filter paper, afterwards, the transmission of the least and most virulent isolates was evaluated by mating behavior from virgin, fungus-contaminated male to females, to examine this ethological pattern as a new approach to deliver conidia against the dengue vector.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>In an exposure chamber with a filter paper impregnated with 6 × 10<sup>8 </sup>conidia ml <sup>-1 </sup>of the least and most virulent strains of <it>B. bassiana</it>, 6-8 day old males of <it>A. aegypti </it>were exposed for 48 hours, and then transferred individually (each one was a replicate) to another chamber and confined with twenty healthy females of the same age. Clean males were used in controls. Survival, infection by true mating (insemination) or by mating attempts (no insemination) and fecundity were daily registered until the death of last female. Data analysis was conducted with proc glm for unbalanced experiments and means were separated with the Ryan test with SAS.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>All strains were highly virulent with LT<sub>50 </sub>ranging from 2.70 (± 0.29) to 5.33 (± 0.53) days. However the most (Bb-CBG2) and least virulent (Bb-CBG4) isolates were also transmitted by mating behavior; both killed 78-90% of females in 15 days after being confined with males that had previously been exposed for 48 hours to fungi. Of these mortality rates, 23 and 38% respectively, were infections acquired by copulations where insemination occurred. The LT<sub>50 </sub>for sexually-infected females were 7.92 (± 0.46) and 8.82 (± 0.45) days for both strains, while the one in control was 13.92 (± 0.58). Likewise, fecundity decreased by 95% and 60% for both Bb-CBG2 and Bb-CBG4 isolates in comparison with control. The role of mating attempts in this delivery procedure of <it>B. bassiana </it>is discussed.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This is the first report about transmission of <it>B. bassiana </it>by mating behavior from virgin, fungus-contaminated males to females in <it>A. aegypti</it>. Fungal infections acquired by this route (autodissemination) infringed high mortality rates (90%) in mated or approached females. However, prior to releasing virgin, fungus-contaminated males to spread <it>B. basasiana </it>among females of <it>A. aegypti</it>, this novel alternative needs further investigations.</p>
url http://www.parasitesandvectors.com/content/4/1/24
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