Biotechnology Chapter 7
Biotechnology Chapter 7
Biotechnology Chapter 7
CHAPTER 17
Production of Microbial Insecticides
Introduction
Over the past decade or so there has been a move away from
the sole use of chemical control, and towards integrated
control, which employs other methods as well as chemical
control.
(a) Predators: Among vertebrates one of the best known is the use of fish especially Gambusia
affinis to eat mosquito larvae. Invertebrate predators include other larger insects e.g. wasps,
while plant predators include Utricularia (a bladder wort).
(b) Genetic manipulations: These include the production (by chemicals or by irradiation) of
large numbers of sterile males, whose mating does not result in fertile eggs.
(c) The use of hormones or hormone analogs: Pheromones are synthetic compounds which
act as sex attractants. The insects attracted are destroyed.
(d) The use of pathogens: Pathogens of insects are found among bacteria, fungi, protozoa,
viruses and nematodes. The idea of using pathogens to control insects originated from
studies of the diseases of the silkworm Bombyx mori. The pioneer work of Bassi was
followed by those of Le Conte, Pasteur, Hagen until Metchnikoff actually tested the control
of sugar beet pests with the fungus Metarrhizium anisopliae in South Russia.
17.2 Biological Control of Insects
In 1976 the World Bank in collaboration with the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) and the World Health Organization (WHO) put into operation a
Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases. The diseases
were malaria, trypanosomiasis, filariasis, leishmaniasis, schistosomiasis and leprosy. Of
these the first four are transmitted by insect vectors.
The WHO which administered the Programme also studied biological control with
respect to the insect-borne disease and ranked the organisms to be used in order of
effectiveness from time to time (See next slide Table 17.1)
For agricultural biological control however some viruses pathogenic to insects are also
used (See next slide Table 17.2)
17.2.1 Desirable Properties in Organisms to be Used for Biological Control
(a) The agent should be highly virulent for the target insect, but should kill no other insects.
(b) The killing should be done quickly so that in the case of crops, damage is kept as low as
possible, and in the case of vectors of disease before extensive transmission of the
disease occurs.
(c) The killing ability should be predictable.
(d) The agent should not be harmful to man, animals or crops; in other words it should be
safe to use.
(e) It should be technically amenable to cheap industrial production.
(f) When produced, it should be stable under the conditions of use such as under the high
temperature and ultra violet light of ordinary sunlight.
(g) It should be viable over reasonably long periods to permit storage and transportation as
necessary.
(h) It should ideally persist or recycle and/or be able to search for its host.
o BACTERIA
17.2.2 Candidates which have o VIRUSES
been Considered as Biological o FUNGI
Control Agents o PROTOZOA
Bacteria
2. Bacillus Moritai
This is used in Japan for the same purpose as B.
thuringiensis serotypes H3 and H3A.
3. Bacillus popilliae
This is an obligate pathogen of the Japanese
beetle Popilla japonica against which it is used.
Since it is an obligateparasite it is produced in
the larvae of the beetle.
(also known as serotype H14). This was isolated in 1976 by Goldberg and Margalit from a
mosquito breeding site in Israel. It has proved very effective in killing mosquito larvae and the
black fly (Simulium spp).
So promising is it from results of various projects sponsored by the Special Program of the
WHO that it was expected that it would be produced on a large scale in the US and Europe and
probably on smaller scales in tropical countries. It has a (nearly 100%) kill of mosquito larvae
and shows no adverse effect on nontarget organisms.
Unlike classical Bacillus thuringiensis it does not produce a betatoxin. Its killing effect is
therefore based principally on its crystalline delta-toxin, (d-toxin) which is resistant to both heat
(surviving 80°C for 10 minutes and 60°C for 20 minutes) and ultra violet light.
Figure:
Bacillus-
thuringinensis
var.
Bacteria
5. Bacillus sphericus
is an highly specific for mosquito larvae as
Bacillus thuringiensis, var israelensis (B.t.i.).
However, whereas the lethality of B.t.i. resides in
toxic protein crystals formed during the spores of
the organism, the toxin of B. sphericus resides in
the cell wall of the organism.
The toxin of B. sphericus works slowly (8-40
hours) compared with that of B.t.i. (2-10 hours).
Bacillus sphericus however, has the advantage of
being able to lay dormant in muds or sewage
ponds and to recycle as susceptible mosquito
larvae appear. Like B.t.i., it had reached stage 4
of had WHO scheme for screening and evaluating Figure: Bacillus Sphericus
biological agents for control of disease vectors
shown in Table 17.3.
Table 17.3 Scheme for screening and evaluating the efficacy, safety, and environmental impact
of biological agents for control of disease vectors designed by the WHO
Viruses
• The advantages of viruses as biological control agents is that they are specific.
• The baculoviruses are the best candidates for insect control because they are:
(a) effective in controlling insect populations,
(b) restricted to a host range of invertebrates,
(c) relatively easy to produce in large quantities and
(d) stable under specific conditions because of the inclusion bodies.
• Several experimental preparations are available and at least two (one each in the USA and Japan)
have been produced on a commercial scale. The preparations are ingested when the insects
consume leaves and other plant parts on which the virus particles have been sprayed. After
ingestion the polyhedral inclusion bodies dissolve within the midgut; the released virions pass
through the mid-gut epithelial cells into the haemocoel. Death of the larvae occurs four to nine
days after ingestion.
H. thomposonii has beenfound particularly active against mites which attack citrus. It is applied
as the conidial powder and maximum effectiveness occurs at 27°C and under moist conditions
or at relative humidities of 79-100%.
Coelomomyces sp. is very effective against mosquitoes but its production is difficult because of
the need of a secondary host. Most effective and specific against mosquitoes are Culicinomyces
sp. which was isolated in Australia and produced a mortality rate on mosquitoes of 90-100%.
Tolypocladium cylindrosporum is essentially like Culicinomyces in being highly specific for
mosquitoes. Lagenidium giganteum and Leptolegnia sp have been shown to have high
mortality for mosquitoes. All the above (except Coelomomyces) can be mass-produced by
fermentation.
In constrast to the rapid action of viruses and spore-forming bacteria, killing by protozoa is
slow and may take weeks.
Furthermore they are difficult to produce, being accomplished only in vivo. Nevertheless they
have been produced and successfully used experimentally for stored-product pests (Matosia
trogoderina) mosquitoes (Nosema algerae) and grasshoppers (Nosema pyrasta).
Vavra vilivis is also effective against mosquitoes and has properties similar to those of
Nogema algerae.
N. algerae does not seem to constitute a safety hazard for man. Factors favoring the use of N.
algerae are sporelongevity, ease of spore-production under laboratory and especially cottage
industry conditions and the probable impact on disease transmission by reducing the longevity
of infected female mosquitoes.
So far however protozoa have not been produced on an industrial scale for biological control.
Two types of toxin
17.2.3 Bacillus thuringiensis produced by
Isecticidal Toxin B.thuringiensis
strains
17.2.3 Bacillus thuringiensis Insecticidal Toxin
Used for the production of Bacillus spp. (excluding production of B. poppillae which is
produced in vivo) and to a lesser extent, fungi.
Medium: In fermentation for Bacillus thuringiensis the active principle sought is the delta toxin
found in the crystals. Media for submerged fermentation have been compounded by various
workers in a number of patents. In one such preparation, the initial growth in a shake flask
occurred in nutrient broth; in the second shake flask, and in the seed fermentor best molasses
(1%), corn steep liquour (0.85%) and CaCO3 (0.1%) were used. A typical medium for
production would be beet molasses (1.86%), pharmamedia (1.4%) and CaCO3 (0.1%). Other
production media contain corn starch (6.8%), sucrose (0.64%), casein (9.94%), corn steep liquor
(4.7%), yeast extract (0.6%) and phosphate buffer (0.6%). A third medium contained soya bean
meal (15%), dextrose (5%), corn starch (5%), MgSO4 (0.3%), FeSO4 (0.02%), ZnSO4 (0.02%)
and CaCO3 (1.0%). The above media could be used also for B. thuringiensis var israelensis.
17.3.1 Submerged Fermentations
Surface culture techniques are used for fungi and for spore formers.
The organisms after shake-flask growth are cultured in a seed tank from where the broth is
transferred to flat bins with perforated bottoms.
The semi-solid medium is a mixture of an agricultural byproduct such as bran, an inert product
such as kisselghur, soy bean meal, dextrose, and mineral salts.
The use of this medium increases the surface area and hence aeration because of the thinness of
its spread in the bins. Hot air is passed through the perforations to dry the material. It is ground,
assayed and compounded to any required strength with inert material.
Submerged, culture in which the hyphae are used have been carried out with good results in the
United States using Hirsutella thompsonii.
17.3.3 In vivo Culture
In Vivo culture methods are used for producing caterpillar viruses, mosquito protozoa and
Bacillus popillae.
The method is labor-intensive and could be easily applied for suitable candidates in developing
countries where expertise for submerged culture production is usually lacking.
Once the organism has been obtained in a sufficient quantity to last for several years it is
lyophilized and stored at low temperature. The viruses are introduced into the food of the larvae
and the dead larvae are crushed, centrifuged to remove large particles and the rest are dried.
The amount of viruses in each larva is variable but the virus content of between one and one
hundred caterpillars should be sufficient to treat one acre in the case of cotton moths. Usually
separate facilities are used for rearing the caterpillars, for infecting them and for the extraction
of the virus particles. The preparation is then bioassayed and mixed with a suitable carrier.
17.4 Bioassay of Biological Insecticides
The inert material is referred to as a carrier or an extender. Carriers or extenders are the
solids or liquids in which the active principle is diluted. When the carrier is a liquid and
the active principle is suitable in it the application is a spray.
There are thus two types of formulation: (a) powders and dusts (b) flowable liquid;
which of the two is manufactured depends to a large extent on the method of production
and intended use of the insecticide.
17.5 Formulation and Use of Bioinsecticides
1. Dusts
The advantage of dusts is greater stability of the preparation. They are also useful when
the insecticide is intended to reach the underside of low lying crops such as cabbages.
Heavy rains unfortunately wash off dusts. They may also lead to inhalation of the
bioinsecticides by the persons applying them. Diluents which have been used in
commercial dust of Bacillus thuringiensis are celite, chalk, kaolin, bentonite, starch, and
lactose.
Lactose has also been used for diluting virus insecticide dusts. When the active principle
is absorbed on to the extender (or filler), the extender is referred to as a carrier. If the
extender or carrier is attractive to the insect as a food, oviposition site etc., then the
extender or filler is known as a bait. Baits for Bacillus thuringiensis include ground corn
meal, and for protozoa, cotton seed oil, honey, hydroxyethyl cellulose.
17.5 Formulation and Use of Bioinsecticides
2. Liquid Formulation
usually made from water in which both the crystal and spores are stable. Sometimes oils and
water/oil emulsions may be used.
Emulsifiers may be added to stabilize emulsions when these are used. Some emulsifiers which have
been used for B. thuringiensis and viruses are Tween 80, Triton B 1956, and Span 20.
The nature of the surface on which the insecticide is applied and which may be oily, smooth or waxy
may prevent the liquid from wetting the sprayed surface. Spreaders or wetting agents which are
surface-tension reducers may be added. Wetting agents may be added to dusts to produce wettable-
powders which are more easily suspended in water.
To prevent run-off of liquids or wettable powders, stickers or adhesives are added to hold the
insecticide to the surface. Stickers which have been used for bacteria and viruses include skim milk,
dried blood, corn syrup, casein, molasses, and polyvinyl chloride latexes.
Protectants are often added to insecticides which protect the active agent from the effect of ultra
violet light, oxidation, desiccation, heat and other environmental factors which reduce the
effectiveness of the active agent.
17.6 Safety Testing of Bioinsecticides
Animal tests including feeding by mouth, inhalation, intraperitoneal, intradermal and intravenous
inoculations, and teratogenicity and carcinogenicity tests are done.
Test animals include rats, mice, monkeys, rabbits, fish, and sometimes when appropriate, human
volunteers.
Tests conducted on the following agricultural entomopathogens in the United States, Russia and
Japan have shown them non-toxic for man, other animals or plants: Bacteria (Bacillus popillae, B.
thuringiensis, B. moritai), five viruses (Heliothus, Orgyia, Lymantria, Autographa, Dendrolimus),
three protozoa (Nosema locustae, N. algerae, N. troqodermae) and two fungi (Beauveria bassiana,
Hirsutella thompsonii).
Tests sponsored by the WHO and carried out in France and the United State have shown the
following useful or potentially useful entomopathogens to be safe. Bacillus sphericus stain SS11-1,
B. sphericus strain 1593-4; B. sphericus strain 1404-9, Bacillus thuringiensis, var. israelensis
(serotype H14) strain WHO/CCBC 1897; Metarrhuzium anisopliae, Nosema algerae.
17.7 Search and Development of New Bioinsecticides
There are a number of stages in the development of a new bioinsecticide. The World Health
Organization has for some years followed the scheme given in Table 17.3 for the screening,
evaluation, safety, and environmental impact of entomopathogens to be used for biological control.
Except where the material can be produced on a small scale, cottage industry, level, production and
sale of the final material will have to be done by industry, with its experience of formulation and
sale distribution.
It has been estimated that it will take five to seven years to develop an entomopathogen into a
biological insecticide; it will take less than five years if some information on safety already exists
on safety of a related bioinsecticide.
The cost of developing a biological insecticide is far less than that of developing a chemical
insecticide by between 20% and 50%.