New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science abstracts
Bacillus thuringiensis as a marker for insect dispersal studies
P. J. Wigley1
V. V. Madhusudhan1
P. J. Cameron2
A. H. Broadwell1
1BioDiscovery New Zealand Limited
24 Balfour Road, Parnell
Auckland, New Zealand
220 Westminster Road, Balmoral
Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract Laboratory studies confirmed that commercial
formulations of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) could be used to mark
potato tuber moths, Phthorimaea operculella. Moths were successfully marked
by direct application or through indirect acquisition by contact with marked
surfaces such as a leaf or a Petri dish. Marked moths were identified by
the distinctive crystalline morphology of different subspecies of Bt, allowing
the separation of individual moths marked with either Btk (kurstaki)
or Bti (israelensis). A simple microbiological method for processing
the trapped moths before definitive, microscopic identification of the subspecies
is described. Field marking was verified by capturing light brown apple moths,
Epiphyas postvittana, from areas that had been subjected to large-scale
spraying of Btk for control of an exotic pest species. Btk was also detected
in moths from isolated traps at c. 1 km from the treated area, but not in
moths from traps at greater distances. These results indicate that Bt preparations
could be used to mark naturally occurring populations as well as laboratory-reared
individuals to study their dispersal.
Keywords marker; insect dispersal; Bacillus thuringiensis;
moths
H04081; Online publication date 13 May 2005 Received 29 September 2004;
accepted 7 March 2005
New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science, 2005, Vol. 33:
139-142
0014-0671/05/3302-0139 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2005
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