Journal of Fungi (Jun 2024)

Natural Prevalence, Molecular Characteristics, and Biological Activity of <i>Metarhizium rileyi</i> (Farlow) Isolated from <i>Spodoptera frugiperda</i> (J. E. Smith) Larvae in Mexico

  • Yordanys Ramos,
  • Samuel Pineda-Guillermo,
  • Patricia Tamez-Guerra,
  • Alonso Alberto Orozco-Flores,
  • José Isaac Figueroa de la Rosa,
  • Selene Ramos-Ortiz,
  • Juan Manuel Chavarrieta-Yáñez,
  • Ana Mabel Martínez-Castillo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof10060416
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 416

Abstract

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Entomopathogenic fungi have been considered potential biological control agents against the fall armyworm Spodoptera frugiperda (J. E. Smith), the world’s most important pest of maize. In this study, we evaluated the natural infection, molecular characteristics, and biological activity of Metarhizium rileyi (Farlow) isolated from S. frugiperda larvae of this insect, collected from maize crops in five Mexican locations. Natural infection ranged from 23% to 90% across all locations analyzed. Twenty-four isolates were evaluated on S. frugiperda second instars at a concentration of 1.0 × 108 conidia/mL, causing 70% to 98.7% mortality and 60.5% to 98.7% sporulation. Isolates T9-21, Z30-21, PP48-21, and L8-22 were selected to determine their phylogenetic relationships by β-tubulin gene analysis and to compare median lethal concentration (CL50), median lethal time (LT50), and larval survival. These isolates were grouped into three clades. The T9-21, PP48-21, and J10-22 isolates were closely related (clade A), but phylogenetically distant from Z30-21 (clade B) and L8-22 (clade C) isolates. These genetic differences were not always reflected in their pathogenicity characteristics since no differences were observed among the LC50 values. Furthermore, isolates T9-21, J10-22, and L8-22 were the fastest to kill S. frugiperda larvae, causing lower survival rates. We conclude that native M. rileyi isolates represent an important alternative for the biocontrol of S. frugiperda.

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