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Pathogens of the oak processionary moth Thaumetopoea processionea: Developing a user-friendly bioassay system and metagenome analyses for microorganisms

GND
1242996451
ORCID
0000-0002-8669-0297
Affiliation
Julius Kühn Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Schäfer, Lea;
GND
17274184X
Affiliation
Julius Kühn Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Jehle, Johannes A.;
GND
1059093685
Affiliation
Julius Kühn Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Kleespies, Regina G.;
GND
1059101742
ORCID
0000-0003-3060-8992
Affiliation
Julius Kühn Institute (JKI), Institute for Biological Control, Germany
Wennmann, Jörg T.

The oak processionary moth (OPM) Thaumetopoea processionea is a pest of oak trees and poses health risks to humans due to the urticating setae of later instar larvae. For this reason, it is difficult to rear OPM under laboratory conditions, carry out bioassays or examine larvae for pathogens. Biological control targets the early larval instars and is based primarily on commercial preparations of Bacillus thuringiensis ssp. kurstaki (Btk). To test the entomopathogenic potential of other spore-forming bacteria, a user-friendly bioassay system was developed that (i) applies bacterial spore suspensions by oak bud dipping, (ii) targets first instar larvae through feeding exposure and (iii) takes into account their group-feeding behavior. A negligible mortality in the untreated control proved the functionality of the newly established bioassay system. Whereas the commercial Btk HD-1 strain was used as a bioassay standard and confirmed as being highly efficient, a Bacillus wiedmannii strain was ineffective in killing OPM larvae. Larvae, which died during the infection experiment, were further subjected to Nanopore sequencing for a metagenomic approach for entomopathogen detection. It further corroborated that B. wiedmannii was not able to infect and establish in OPM, but identified potential insect pathogenic species from the genera Serratia and Pseudomonas.

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