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Long-term Storage of Metarhizium flavoviride Conidia in Oil Formulations for the Control of Locusts and Grasshoppers

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Freshly harvested conidia of Metarhizium flavoviride (Gams & Rozsypal) were stored in two vegetable oils, groundnut or soya, or a mineral oil, Edelex. They were diluted with either Shellsol K or deodorized kerosene, and antioxidants were added to half of the vegetable oil formulations. Dried non-indicating silica gel was added to half of the formulations before storage at 8 or 17 C. Undried conidia, those without silica gel, lost viability rapidly, with germination dropping below 40% after 9 and 32 weeks at 17 and 8 C respectively. After 127 weeks (ca. 30 months) in storage, germination remained at over 60 and 80% for the dried formulations at 17 and 8 C respectively (after an unexplained drop in germination after 16-18 months in storage). Comparable figures for 160 weeks (ca. 37 months) were 47 and 68%. These figures represented germination after 24 h of incubation; after 48 h of incubation, germination was 79 and 89% from samples stored for 160 weeks at 17 and 8 C respectively. Representative formulations of the stored conidia were tested in bioassays against the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria (Forskal) up to 30 months into the experiment, and were found to have retained full virulence compared with freshly prepared formulations.

Keywords: METARHIZIUM FLAVOVIRIDE SCHISTOCERCA GREGARIA CONIDIA STORAGE VEGETABLE OIL MINERAL OIL

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 June 1995

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