Beauveria bassiana (Balsamo Á Crivelli) Vuillemin based mycoinsecticides are used against agricultural, veterinary and medical insect pests. The fungus has a very diverse and extensive host range. Variation in virulence among isolates of B. bassiana to different insect species has been abundantly documented. Given the effect of multiple factors on virulence, it is not certain whether the observed difference in virulence can be labelled as host specificity. Environmental conditions and susceptibility of the insect population are two main factors that affect successful fungal infection. Keeping the environmental factors constant, if virulence of an isolate to different insect species and different populations within an insect species is compared, the scale of difference between the two responses can be estimated. If differences in virulence of an isolate to different insect species are greater than the difference in virulence to different insect populations within an insect species, then, the isolate can be considered as exhibiting specific preference to those insect species towards which it exhibits high virulence. To examine this feature, a worldwide sample of B. bassiana was bioassayed on nine insect species and two different populations within two insect species. Laboratory bioassays were done on: Bombyx mori (Lepidoptera), Spodoptera litura (Lepidoptera), Chilo partellus (Lepidoptera), Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera), Epilachna vigintioctopunctata (Coleoptera), Mylabris pustulata (Coleoptera), Aphis craccivora (Homoptera), Maconellicoccus hirsutus (Hemiptera) and Oecophylla smaragdina (Hymenoptera). The range of variation in virulence of a B. bassiana isolate to different insect species was not more than that observed with different populations within a single insect species. B. bassiana is thus a generalist with no strict host preference. B. bassiana based biopesticide can be used as a broad spectrum insecticide against a myriad of insect pests.
Beauveria bassiana, a mitosporic fungus used for the biological control of many insect species, is recognized as a "species complex" comprising genetically diverse lineages. Being predominantly asexual, mating tests cannot be applied to delimit species in this species complex. Genetic tests offer an indirect means of identifying species among isolates. To this end, molecular genetic analysis of a sample of B. bassiana isolates with 2 subsamples, 1 representing a worldwide collection and another from a localized epizootic population was carried out. DNA markers generated through AFLPs (amplified fragment length polymorphisms) and SSCPs (single-strand conformation poly morphisms) and nucleotide sequence data of different allelic forms of 3 genes (large and small subunits of rRNA and beta-tubulin) were evaluated. The B. bassiana isolates from the worldwide sample showed 11% overall similarity and no closely clustered groups. Phylogenetic trees generated from the AFLP and SSCP data of this sample resolved the different isolates into distinct phylogenetic lineages. In the epizootic B. bassiana population, prevalence of recombination was evident from random association of alleles in multilocus tests and lack of phylogenetic concordance among 3 gene genealogies. Thus, the worldwide sample of B. bassiana exhibits a predominantly clonal structure, hinting at species divergence leading to cryptic speciation with recombination being customary among isolates sharing a close ecological niche.
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