Title of article :
Susceptibility of Nontarget Hosts to Nosema furnacalis (Microsporida: Nosematidae), a Potential Biological Control Agent of the European Corn Borer, Ostrinia nubilalis (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae)
Author/Authors :
Oien C. T.، نويسنده , , Ragsdale D. W.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Nosema furnacalis Wenn whose normal host is the Asian corn borer, Ostrinia furnacalis (Guenee), is also pathogenic to the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilaus (Hübner), making N. furnacalis a candidate biological control agent for O. nubilalis. Before N. furnacalis can be used in classical biological control, its effect on natural enemies of O. nubilalis needs to be assessed. We fed nine predator species and one parasitoid of O. nubilalis either purified N. furnacalis spores or N. furnacalis-infected larvae. Using microscopic examination and a species-specific serological assay within these natural enemies, we determined whether N. furnacalis spores were present and whether the spores had germinated. Of the 424 adult predators fed N. furnacalis spores or N. furnacalis-infected corn horers, only 2 tested weakly positive with the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), indicating that ingested spores did not germinate in the adult predators. Fifteen of 130 immature predators tested weakly positive with the ELISA, but because relatively few spores were found upon microscopic examination, we concluded there was no evidence of an active N. furnacalis infection in any of the nine predator species tested. In contrast, the parasitoid Macrocentrus grandii Goidanich always tested strongly positive in the ELISA (mean O.D.405 nm = 1.36), indicating that sporoplasm antigens were present. Microscopic examination of this parasitoid showed that a high number of spores were present (mean spore number/larvae 1.4 × 107). From these data, M. grandii might become infected with N. furnacalis.