Abstract

A nuclear polyhedrosis virus isolated from the alfalfa looper, Autographa californica, was found to infect several species of caterpillars including the cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni; the beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua; and the saltmarsh caterpillar, Estigmene acrea. Studies were therefore conducted to determine the quantitative effects of passage through the alternate hosts, S. exigua and E. acrea, on the infectivity of this virus to newly hatched first-instar cabbage looper larvae. When 11 preparations of polyhedra obtained from a like number of primary passages through the original or alternate hosts were assayed and the mortality at 7-, 10-, and 14-day intervals were subjected to probit analysis, the LD 50 s for the three intervals differed but those for the preparations at any given interval did not. Therefore, any of the three hosts could be used to propagate the virus, and whichever proves the easiest to rear and provides the highest yields of polyhedra can be selected.

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