| Literature DB >> 33335143 |
Ayaovi Agbessenou1,2, Komivi S Akutse3, Abdullahi A Yusuf2,4, Sunday Ekesi1, Sevgan Subramanian1, Fathiya M Khamis1.
Abstract
Endophytic fungi live within plant tissues without causing any harm to the host, promote its growth, and induce systemic resistance against pests and diseases. To mitigate the challenging concealed feeding behavior of immature stages of Tuta absoluta in both tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) and nightshade (Solanum scabrum) host plants, 15 fungal isolates were assessed for their endophytic and insecticidal properties. Twelve isolates were endophytic to both host plants with varied colonization rates. Host plants endophytically-colonized by Trichoderma asperellum M2RT4, Beauveria bassiana ICIPE 706 and Hypocrea lixii F3ST1 outperformed all the other isolates in reducing significantly the number of eggs laid, mines developed, pupae formed and adults emerged. Furthermore, the survival of exposed adults and F1 progeny was significantly reduced by Trichoderma sp. F2L41 and B. bassiana isolates ICIPE 35(4) and ICIPE 35(15) compared to other isolates. The results indicate that T. asperellum M2RT4, B. bassiana ICIPE 706 and H. lixii F3ST1 have high potential to be developed as endophytic-fungal-based biopesticide for the management of T. absoluta.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33335143 PMCID: PMC7746743 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-78898-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Endophytic colonization of tomato Solanum lycopersicum (A) and nightshade Solanum scabrum (B) host plant parts by 15 fungal isolates at 4–5 weeks post-inoculation. Bar chart represents means ± SE (standard error) at 95% CI (P < 0.05; n = 4).
Figure 2Effect of endophytically-colonized host plants by fungal isolates on survival of adult Tuta absoluta: (A) Kaplan–Meier survival curves of Tuta absoluta adults exposed to endophytically-colonized tomato plants, (B) Kaplan–Meier survival curves of Tuta absoluta adults exposed to endophytically-colonized nightshade plants (P < 0.05, n = 4).
Figure 3Effect of endophytically-colonized host plants by fungal isolates on oviposition and leafmining of Tuta absoluta at 48 h post-exposure. (A) Bar chart showing mean number (± SE) of Tuta absoluta eggs laid on endophytically-colonized tomato plants. (B) Bar chart showing mean number (± SE) of mines produced by Tuta absoluta on endophytically-colonized tomato plants. (C) Bar chart showing mean number (± SE) of Tuta absoluta eggs laid on endophytically-colonized nightshade plants. (D) Bar chart showing mean number (± SE) of mines produced by Tuta absoluta on endophytically-colonized nightshade plants. Means followed by a different lowercase letters are significantly different (P < 0.05; n = 4; Tukey’s HSD test).
Figure 4Effect of endophytically-colonized host plants by fungal isolates on Tuta absoluta pupation and adult emergence. (A) Bar chart showing mean number (± SE) of Tuta absoluta pupae produced on endophytically-colonized tomato plants. (B) Bar chart showing mean number of Tuta absoluta adults emerging from endophytically-colonized tomato plants. (C) Bar chart showing mean number (± SE) of Tuta absoluta pupae produced on endophytically-colonized nightshade plants. (D) Bar chart showing mean number of Tuta absoluta adults emerging from endophytically-colonized nightshade plants. Means followed by a different lowercase letters are significantly different (P < 0.05; n = 4; Tukey’s HSD test).
Figure 5Effect of endophytically-colonized host plants by fungal isolates on Tuta absoluta F1 progenies survival. (A) Kaplan–Meier survival curves of Tuta absoluta F1 progenies survival emerging from endophytically-colonized tomato plants. (B) Kaplan–Meier survival curves of Tuta absoluta F1 progenies survival emerging from endophytically-colonized nightshade plants (P < 0.05, n = 4).
List of fungal isolates used in this study.
| Fungal species | Isolate | Source | Origin | Year of isolation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICIPE 35(4), ICIPE 35(6), ICIPE 35(12), ICIPE 35(15) | Coffee berry | Kenya | 2009 | |
| ICIPE 273 | Soil | Mbita (Kenya) | 2006 | |
| ICIPE 706 | Monocots | Kenya | 2012 | |
| ICIPE 7 | Rusinga (Kenya) | 1996 | ||
| ICIPE 30 | Kenduba (Kenya) | 1989 | ||
| ICIPE 69 | Soil | Matete (DRC) | 1990 | |
| F2L41 | Onion | Loitoktok (Kenya) | 2012 | |
| F2S21 | Onion | Loitoktok (Kenya) | 2012 | |
| M2RT4 | Maize and Sorghum | Nakuru (Kenya) | 2009 | |
| F2S51 | Onion | Embu (Kenya) | 2012 | |
| F3ST1 | Maize and Sorghum | Nakuru, Embu and Kakamega (Kenya) | 2009 |