Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea

The red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, is one of the most common and economically important pests of stored cereal products worldwide. Furthermore, these beetles can act as vectors for several fungal post-harvest diseases. In this study, we collected T. castaneum from 49 rice processing complexe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tae-Seong Yun, Sook-Young Park, Jihyun Yu, Yujin Hwang, Ki-Jeong Hong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hanrimwon Publishing Company 2018-10-01
Series:The Plant Pathology Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200038
id doaj-c1272a95780b409d88d14f7a64540943
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c1272a95780b409d88d14f7a645409432020-11-24T23:24:02ZengHanrimwon Publishing CompanyThe Plant Pathology Journal1598-22542018-10-0134535636610.5423/PPJ.OA.02.2018.002710.5423PPJ.OA.02.2018.0027Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in KoreaTae-Seong Yun0Sook-Young Park1Jihyun Yu2Yujin Hwang3Ki-Jeong Hong4Department of Plant Medicine, College of Life Science and Natural Resources, Sunchon National University, Suncheon 57922, KoreaDepartment of Plant Medicine, College of Life Science and Natural Resources, Sunchon National University, Suncheon 57922, KoreaDepartment of Plant Medicine, College of Life Science and Natural Resources, Sunchon National University, Suncheon 57922, KoreaDepartment of Plant Medicine, College of Life Science and Natural Resources, Sunchon National University, Suncheon 57922, KoreaDepartment of Plant Medicine, College of Life Science and Natural Resources, Sunchon National University, Suncheon 57922, KoreaThe red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, is one of the most common and economically important pests of stored cereal products worldwide. Furthermore, these beetles can act as vectors for several fungal post-harvest diseases. In this study, we collected T. castaneum from 49 rice processing complexes (RPCs) nationwide during 2016–2017 and identified contaminating fungal species on the surface of the beetles. Five beetles from each region were placed on potato dextrose agar media or Fusarium selection media after wet processing with 100% relative humidity at 27°C for one week. A total of 142 fungal isolates were thus collected. By sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region, 23 fungal genera including one unidentified taxon were found to be associated with T. castaneum. The genus Aspergillus spp. (28.9%) was the most frequently present, followed by Cladosporium spp. (12.0%), Hyphopichia burtonii (9.2%), Penicillium spp. (8.5%), Mucor spp. (6.3%), Rhizopus spp. (5.6%), Cephaliophora spp. (3.5%), Alternaria alternata (2.8%) and Monascus sp. (2.8%). Less commonly identified were genera Fusarium, Nigrospora, Beauveria, Chaetomium, Coprinellus, Irpex, Lichtheimia, Trichoderma, Byssochlamys, Cochliobolus, Cunninghamella, Mortierella, Polyporales, Rhizomucor and Talaromyces. Among the isolates, two known mycotoxin-producing fungi, Aspergillus flavus and Fusarium spp. were also identified. This result is consistent with previous studies that surveyed fungal and mycotoxin contamination in rice from RPCs. Our study indicates that the storage pest, T. castaneum, would play an important role in spreading fungal contaminants and consequently increasing mycotoxin contamination in stored rice.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200038fungimycotoxinrice processing complexesTribolium castaneum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tae-Seong Yun
Sook-Young Park
Jihyun Yu
Yujin Hwang
Ki-Jeong Hong
spellingShingle Tae-Seong Yun
Sook-Young Park
Jihyun Yu
Yujin Hwang
Ki-Jeong Hong
Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea
The Plant Pathology Journal
fungi
mycotoxin
rice processing complexes
Tribolium castaneum
author_facet Tae-Seong Yun
Sook-Young Park
Jihyun Yu
Yujin Hwang
Ki-Jeong Hong
author_sort Tae-Seong Yun
title Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea
title_short Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea
title_full Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea
title_fullStr Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea
title_full_unstemmed Isolation and Identification of Fungal Species from the Insect Pest Tribolium castaneum in Rice Processing Complexes in Korea
title_sort isolation and identification of fungal species from the insect pest tribolium castaneum in rice processing complexes in korea
publisher Hanrimwon Publishing Company
series The Plant Pathology Journal
issn 1598-2254
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, is one of the most common and economically important pests of stored cereal products worldwide. Furthermore, these beetles can act as vectors for several fungal post-harvest diseases. In this study, we collected T. castaneum from 49 rice processing complexes (RPCs) nationwide during 2016–2017 and identified contaminating fungal species on the surface of the beetles. Five beetles from each region were placed on potato dextrose agar media or Fusarium selection media after wet processing with 100% relative humidity at 27°C for one week. A total of 142 fungal isolates were thus collected. By sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region, 23 fungal genera including one unidentified taxon were found to be associated with T. castaneum. The genus Aspergillus spp. (28.9%) was the most frequently present, followed by Cladosporium spp. (12.0%), Hyphopichia burtonii (9.2%), Penicillium spp. (8.5%), Mucor spp. (6.3%), Rhizopus spp. (5.6%), Cephaliophora spp. (3.5%), Alternaria alternata (2.8%) and Monascus sp. (2.8%). Less commonly identified were genera Fusarium, Nigrospora, Beauveria, Chaetomium, Coprinellus, Irpex, Lichtheimia, Trichoderma, Byssochlamys, Cochliobolus, Cunninghamella, Mortierella, Polyporales, Rhizomucor and Talaromyces. Among the isolates, two known mycotoxin-producing fungi, Aspergillus flavus and Fusarium spp. were also identified. This result is consistent with previous studies that surveyed fungal and mycotoxin contamination in rice from RPCs. Our study indicates that the storage pest, T. castaneum, would play an important role in spreading fungal contaminants and consequently increasing mycotoxin contamination in stored rice.
topic fungi
mycotoxin
rice processing complexes
Tribolium castaneum
url http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200038
work_keys_str_mv AT taeseongyun isolationandidentificationoffungalspeciesfromtheinsectpesttriboliumcastaneuminriceprocessingcomplexesinkorea
AT sookyoungpark isolationandidentificationoffungalspeciesfromtheinsectpesttriboliumcastaneuminriceprocessingcomplexesinkorea
AT jihyunyu isolationandidentificationoffungalspeciesfromtheinsectpesttriboliumcastaneuminriceprocessingcomplexesinkorea
AT yujinhwang isolationandidentificationoffungalspeciesfromtheinsectpesttriboliumcastaneuminriceprocessingcomplexesinkorea
AT kijeonghong isolationandidentificationoffungalspeciesfromtheinsectpesttriboliumcastaneuminriceprocessingcomplexesinkorea
_version_ 1725562263613472768