Abstract

When larvae of the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella, were fed diets containing spores of Nosema plodiae, the number that survived to the adult stage decreased and the rate of adult emergence was retarded as the concentration of spores was increased; all surviving adults were infected. Also, when larvae were reared on diets containing spores of Nosema heterosporum, the number that survived to the adult stage decreased as the concentration of spores was increased; however, no relationship was apparent between concentration of spores and the rate of adult emergence. The LC 50's of N. plodiae and N. heterosporum were 8.09 × 10 6 and 4.52 × 10 3 spores/g diet, respectively, which confirmed preliminary observations regarding the relative virulence of the two species of Nosema to Indian meal moth larvae.

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