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Long-term Field Efficacy of the Entomogenous Fungus Metarhizium anisopliae against the Subterranean Scarab, Adoryphorus couloni

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The efficacy of Metarhizium anisopliae DAT F-001 against Adoryphorus couloni was examined over 4 years on a sheep grazing property ('Inverell') in central Tasmania. Three generations of the primary A. couloni population and two generations of the overlapping population were studied. Application of 5.1 0.7 104 M. anisopliae spores g-1 of soil (2 cm below the soil surface), during midwinter 1989, when the primary population was in the middle of the L3 larval stage, resulted in 30.3% fewer larvae in treated plots by 21 weeks and 57.8% less pupae by 27 weeks. The population decline was consistent with a mortality model developed from laboratory data. In the two subsequent generations of the primary population, there were 63.2% (1991) and 45.0% (1993) fewer larvae in the treated plots before the damaging L3 stage. The two sequential generations of the overlapping A. couloni larval populations had 68% (1990) and 65% (1992) fewer larvae in the treated plots than in the untreated plots. Reductions in larval numbers led to a greater retention of sown perennial grasses, reduced weed invasion and a 23% increase in pasture productivity in the autumn of 1992. Incorporation of M. anisopliae into the soil did not reduce the numbers of non-target invertebrates. The level of M. anisopliae DAT F-001 in the pasture remained at levels close to the applied concentration (5.1 0.7 colony-forming units g-1 of soil), but increased 10-fold when mummified L3 larval, prepupal and pupal cadavers were present from January to June 1990. The level of the fungus in the soil was still twice the original applied concentration at the conclusion of sampling in March 1992.

Keywords: ADORYPHORUS COULONI FIELD EFFICACY PATHOGENICITY MODELLING PEST MANAGEMENT PASTURE PRODUCTIVITY; DAT F-001; METARHIZIUM ANISOPLIAE

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 December 1995

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