Abstract

The transfer of conidia of Metarhizium anisopliae between tsetse flies Glossina morsitans and the effects of fungal inoculation on mating and blood meal feeding behaviors were investigated in the laboratory. Male or female flies were inoculated with fungal conidia (“donors“) and allowed to pair with fungus-free mate of opposite sex (“recipients”) at 1-day-interval up to three mates. Fungus-treated male or female “donor” flies as well as their mates “recipients” died from fungal infection. However, mortality in male “recipient” flies declined with successive mating, from 82.5 to 32.5 %. Fungus-treated males readily located female flies and mating was successful in most cases comparable to the controls. There were no significant differences (P > 0.05) in mean duration of mating, number of jerking movements between fungus-treated and fungus-free males for all the mating lines, except in the number of jerking movements when male flies mated with the 3rd line female flies. Fungus-treated and fungus-free female flies previously mated with treated and non-treated males showed refractoriness during subsequent pairings. The number of fertile female flies was higher (P < 0.05) in fungus-free than in fungus-treated treatments, thus producing more pupae. High concentration of fungus (3.0 × 106 conidia ml−1) significantly (P < 0.05) reduced blood meal intake of flies. This study has shown that fungal infection does not affect the mating behavior of tsetse flies and fly-to-fly contamination does occur during matings. These are important attributes if entomopathogenic fungi have to be used in auto-dissemination strategy and be integrated into sterile insect technique.

Highlights

  • The potential of an entomopathogenic fungus to suppress field tsetse populations was recently demonstrated in Lake Victoria, Kenya, against Glossina fuscipes fuscipes Newstead (Diptera: Glossinidae) (Maniania et al 2006)

  • This study has shown that fungal infection does not affect the mating

  • All male flies that were directly exposed to conidia of M. anisopliae succumbed to fungal infection with mycosis within 10 days post-inoculation

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Summary

Introduction

The potential of an entomopathogenic fungus to suppress field tsetse populations was recently demonstrated in Lake Victoria, Kenya, against Glossina fuscipes fuscipes Newstead (Diptera: Glossinidae) (Maniania et al 2006). (Hypocreales: Clavicipitaceae) applied in Maniania’s contamination device (Maniania 2002) reduced the fly population by 82.4 % relative to untreated control while ‘‘trap and kill’’ treatment reduced the fly population by 95.8 % during the same experimental period. Five months after removal of the treatments, the number of flies increased considerably in the ‘‘trap and kill’’ treatment compared to the fungus treatment. Fungal infection was observed in fly populations 3 months after the end of the treatment (Maniania et al 2006). The transfer of inoculum between fungus-treated and healthy insects has been reported in many Diptera in laboratory assays

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