Muscardine

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A cockroach with muscardine caused by M. anisopliae. Metarhizium anisopliae infected cockroach (PLoS).jpg
A cockroach with muscardine caused by M. anisopliae.

Muscardine is a disease of insects. It is caused by many species of entomopathogenic fungus. Many muscardines are known for affecting silkworms. [1] Muscardine may also be called calcino. [2]

Contents

While studying muscardine in silkworms in the 19th century, Agostino Bassi found that the causal agent was a fungus. This was the first demonstration of the germ theory of disease, the first time a microorganism was recognized as an animal pathogen. [3] There are many types of muscardine. They are often named for the color of the conidial layer each fungus leaves on its host. [1]

Black muscardine

Black muscardine is caused by Beauveria brongniartti and Metarhizium anisopliae . [1]

Metarhizium species such as M. anisopliae can cause fatal disease in over 200 species of insect. [4]

Brown muscardine

Aspergillosis of insects can be called brown muscardine. Over 10 Aspergillus species can cause the disease, such as A. flavus and A. tamari . The conidial layer may be brownish or greenish yellow. [1]

Grassy muscardine

Grassy muscardine is caused by Hirsutella necatrix . [5] This fungus produces an enzyme that breaks down the chitin in its host's body. [6]

Gray muscardine

Gray muscardine is caused by Isaria javanica . [5]

Green muscardine

Green muscardine disease is the presentation of a fungal infection of insects caused by members of the Metarhizium genus (now including Nomuraea rileyi ), because of the green colour of their spores. Once the fungus has killed its host, mycelia invade the host's body and, under humid conditions, the insect cuticle becomes covered with a layer of green spores, [2] hence the name of the disease. [7] It was originally discovered as a pest of silk worms, upon which it was highly lethal. [8] To insect mycologists and microbial control specialists, "green muscardine" refers to fungal infection caused by Metarhizium spp., whereas in sericulture, "green muscardine" refers to a similar fungal infection caused by Nomuraea rileyi . [9] Green muscardine has been identified as disease of over 200 known insect species. [10]

Orange muscardine

Orange muscardine is caused by Sterigmatocystis japonica . [1]

Penicillosis

Penicillosis of insects is considered a type of muscardine, particularly when caused by Penicillium citrinum and P. granulatum . [1]

Red muscardine

Red muscardine is caused by Sporosporella uvella [1] and Isaria fumosoroseus. [5]

White muscardine

One of the best known forms is white muscardine, which is caused by Beauveria bassiana . [11]

When suffering from white muscardine, an insect larva may become inactive and stop eating. The elasticity of its cuticle is lost and it may experience vomiting and diarrhea. As it dies it hardens. [1] The fungus leaves the body of its host covered in powdery white conidia. [11] The fungal layer is tough due to oxalate crystals, and this slows the decay of the body. [1] When a pupa is infected, it often mummifies. It shrinks and wrinkles before growing a fungal coating. In an adult moth, the body hardens and the wings drop off. [2]

Spotted in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana a Golden silk orb-weaver dead from white muscardine disease with white mold emerging from the cadaver's joints and pores. WhiteMuscardineDiseaseGoldenSilkOrbWeaver.jpg
Spotted in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana a Golden silk orb-weaver dead from white muscardine disease with white mold emerging from the cadaver's joints and pores.

During infection, the fungus absorbs water and nutrients from the host. The hemolymph of the insect crystallizes and thickens. The fungus usually produces toxins, as well. After it kills the host, the fungus continues to absorb water from the body, causing it to harden further. [2]

Other insects prone to white muscardine include the brown planthopper [11] and the diaprepes root weevil. [12]

Yellow muscardine

Yellow muscardine is caused by Isaria farinosa . [1] [5]

Yellow red muscardine

Yellow red muscardine is caused by Isaria fumosoroseus . It can produce reddish patches on the external body and powdery masses of spores internally. [1]

Control

Fungicidal agents such as azadirachtin and phytoallexin have been used against some muscardine pathogens. [13] Silkworm breeders dust their cages with slaked lime to discourage fungal growth. [14] In India a dust of chaff soaked in formalin is applied to the larvae. [15]

Related Research Articles

<i>Beauveria bassiana</i> Species of fungus

Beauveria bassiana is a fungus that grows naturally in soils throughout the world and acts as a parasite on various arthropod species, causing white muscardine disease; it thus belongs to the group of entomopathogenic fungi. It is used as a biological insecticide to control a number of pests, including termites, thrips, whiteflies, aphids and various beetles. Its use in the control of bed bugs and malaria-transmitting mosquitos is under investigation.

An entomopathogenic fungus is a fungus that can kill or seriously disable insects. They do not need to enter an insect's body through oral ingestion or intake; rather, they directly penetrate though the exoskeleton.

Metarhizium robertsii is a fungus that grows naturally in soils throughout the world and causes disease in various insects by acting as a parasitoid. It is a mitosporic fungus with asexual reproduction, which was formerly classified in the form class Hyphomycetes of the phylum Deuteromycota.

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<i>Beauveria</i> Genus of fungi

Beauveria is a genus of asexually-reproducing fungi allied with the ascomycete family Cordycipitaceae. Its several species are typically insect pathogens. The sexual states (teleomorphs) of Beauveria species, where known, are species of Cordyceps.

<i>Entomophthora</i> Genus of fungi

Entomophthora is a fungal genus in the family Entomophthoraceae. Species in this genus are parasitic on flies and other two-winged insects. The genus was circumscribed by German physician Johann Baptist Georg Wolfgang Fresenius (1808–1866) in 1856.

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<i>Metarhizium flavoviride</i> Species of fungus

Metarhizium flavoviride is a Sordariomycete in the order Hypocreales and family Clavicipitaceae. The genus Metarhizium currently consists of over 70 described species and are a group of fungal isolates that are known to be virulent against Hemiptera and some Coleoptera. M. flavoviride is described as its own species, but there also exists a variety of M. flavoviride, which is M. flavoviride var. flavoviride. Previously described varieties of M. flavoviride have been documented, however recent random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers have assigned these varieties as new species. The reassigned species are as follows: M. flavoviride Type E is now M. brasiliense; M. flavoviride var. minus is now M. minus; M. flavoviride var. novozealandicum is now M. novozealandicum; and M. flavoviride var. pemphigi is now M. pemphigi.

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<i>Microascus brevicaulis</i> Species of fungus

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<i>Isaria fumosorosea</i> Species of fungus

Isaria fumosorosea is an entomopathogenic fungus, formerly known as Paecilomyces fumosoroseus. It shows promise as a biological pesticide with an extensive host range.

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<i>Metarhizium anisopliae</i> Species of fungus

Metarhizium anisopliae is the type species in its genus of fungi, that grows naturally in soils throughout the world and causes disease in various insects by acting as a parasitoid. Ilya I. Mechnikov named it Entomophthora anisopliae (basionym) after the insect species from which it was originally isolated – the beetle Anisoplia austriaca and from these early days, fungi such as this have been seen as potentially important tools for pest management. It is a mitosporic fungus with asexual reproduction, which was formerly classified in the form class Hyphomycetes of the phylum Deuteromycota.

Batkoa major is a naturally occurring fungus that infects insects.

References

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  8. R. W. Glaser (1 June 1926). "The Green Muscardine Disease in Silkworms and Its Control". Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 19 (2): 180–192. doi:10.1093/aesa/19.2.180.
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  10. Richard Calderone (12 October 2001). Fungal Pathogenesis: Principles and Clinical Applications. CRC Press. p. 139. ISBN   978-0-8247-0568-8.
  11. 1 2 3 White Muscardine Fungus. Archived 2013-07-04 at archive.today Rice Knowledge Bank. International Rice Research Institute (IRRI). 2009.
  12. Beavers, J. B., et al. (1972). Two Muscardine fungi pathogenic to Diaprepes abbreviatus. The Florida Entomologist 55(2) 117-120.
  13. Vyas, R. V., et al. (1992). Effect of some natural pesticides on entomogenous muscardine fungi. Indian J Exp Biol. 30(5) 435-6.
  14. Ravikumar, J., et al. Muscardine: a menace to silkworm in winter. The Hindu. January 7, 2010.
  15. Veeranna, G., et al. (1985). Muscardine Disease – Precautionary Measures and Its Control. Karnataka State Sericulture Research and Development Institute, Bangalore, Karnataka.