Abstract

The larval stage of the one-host tick, Dermacentor albipictus Packard (Acari: Ixodidae), the winter tick, is spent aggregated on the ground in summer until they quest for hosts in the autumn. Metarhizium brunneum (Petch) and Beauveria bassiana (Balsamo-Crivelli) Vuillemin are promising fungal biocontrol agents of ticks. The success of tick biocontrol using entomopathogenic fungi relies on infective propagule contact with a susceptible host at the right time within their life cycle and stage. The susceptibility of various-age D. albipictus larvae to commercial isolates of M. brunneum strain F52 (Mb-F52) and B. bassiana strain GHA (Bb-GHA) was assessed over a three-week period after contact with surfaces treated with 1.3 × 106 conidia/cm2. Larvae of four ages were examined (a) upon eclosion from eggs, (b) 2-weeks, (c) 1.5-months and (d) 3-months-old. Mortality of larvae exposed to fungus-treated surfaces ranged from 4 to 51% for Bb-GHA and 64–100% for Mb-F52 after three weeks. Significantly greater mortality was observed when larvae were exposed to Mb-F52 than Bb-GHA. Larval susceptibility was significantly greater within 2 weeks of eclosion from eggs and after 3 months of age. These results demonstrate the varying susceptibility of larvae to mycoacaricides at different times within their non-parasitic larval life stage.

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