Abstract

Locally available raw materials were used as fermentation media for the preparation of an effective bacterial insecticide of Bacillus sphaericus in Ghana. The choice of materials for media production was based on their availability, their cost and how well they supported growth and sporulation of the bacterium. The materials used were anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus), spent grain from breweries, bambara beans (Vigna subterranea), sprout maize (Zea mays) and B. sphaericus strain IAB 881. The larvicidal activities of each final whole culture of the insecticides prepared were evaluated against third and fourth instar larvae of the mosquito species Culex quinquefasciatus. The levels of larvicidal activity exhibited by preparations using the raw materials were similar to those where the bacterium was cultured in a synthetic medium, with median lethal concentrations ranging from 0.30 10- 5 to 0.68 10-6. Cell counts were in the range 11 108 - 36 108 colony-forming units ml-1, and spore counts were between 29 107 and 61 107 ml-1.

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