The Impact of Insecticides on Mycelial Growth of Metarhizium spp. and Their Efficacy in Controlling Larvae and Pupae of the House Fly (Musca domestica L.)
Duanpen Wongsorn, Benya Saenmahayak, Nittaya Pitiwittayakul, Surachai Rattanasuk

TL;DR
This study shows that two Metarhizium fungi isolates can effectively control house fly larvae and pupae and remain effective even when grown with certain insecticides.
Contribution
The study identifies two Metarhizium isolates compatible with insecticides for biological control of house flies.
Findings
NMMet_SS9/2 and NMMet_CLPK4/1 showed high infection rates (86.67% and 60.00%) against house fly larvae and pupae.
Culturing these isolates with Cypas® 250 EC at 50 mL per 6.25 L did not significantly affect their mycelial growth or insecticidal efficacy.
Spore suspensions from these isolates achieved mortality rates of 93.33% and 75.56% in house fly larvae and pupae.
Abstract
Metarhizium spp. are entomopathogenic hyphomycete fungi with great potential as biological control agents against insects and as a component within integrated pest management systems. This study evaluated 10 Metarhizium spp. isolates for their effectiveness against house fly larvae and pupae. The isolates with the highest infection rates were tested for compatibility with insecticides. NMMet_SS9/2 and NMMet_CLPK4/1 were the most effective, with infection rates of 86.67% and 60.00% for larvae and pupae, respectively. Both isolates were cultured on Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) mixed with Cypas® 250 EC (100 mL and 50 mL per 6.25 L) and Tanidil®-T (100 g/L and 50 g/L) to assess the impact of insecticides on mycelial growth. After 28 days, the radial growth of NMMet_SS9/2 (81.33 mm) and NMMet_CLPK4/1 (77.67 mm) on PDA with Cypas® 250 EC (50 mL per 6.25 L) showed no significant differences (p >…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEntomopathogenic Microorganisms in Pest Control · Nematode management and characterization studies
