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  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Introduction           Extensive discussions
  of the use of pathogens in biological control in tropical climates were given
  by Federici (1995, 1999) and Weiser (1984). Insects are susceptible to a
  variety of diseases caused by pathogens, many of which are acute and fatal,
  and can be important short-term regulators of insect populations. Therefore,
  insect pathogens are the subject of a considerable research effort aimed at
  developing the most effective pathogens as biological control agents. There
  has been interest shown for more than 100 years in controlling insects with
  pathogens, but their further development is now greater than ever due to the
  continually increasing need to replace chemical insecticides.  However, as of 2001, there are an ever
  increasing number of scientific papers dealing with the development of
  resistance to the various organisms, not unlike that witnessed earlier with
  flurocarbon insecticides.           In modern
  agriculture the mass production of microbial insecticides was more common
  than that for parasitoids and predators. This is because the production of
  microbes is easier than rearing predators and parasitoids. The latter are
  stored, packed and transported with a great risk of loss and also the methods
  for the technology available for their application is underdeveloped.
  Microbes are easily stored, packed and the method of application is very
  similar to that of chemical pesticides. Also the evaluation of treatment
  effects is performed in a way similar to insecticides, except that the period
  between application and effective mortality is usually longer. Other key
  references are Burges (1981), Burges & Hussey (1971), DeBach (1964),
  Franz (1980), Huffaker & Messenger (1976), Kurstak (1982), Poinar &
  Thomas (1978) and Weiser (1966, 1972, 1977).           In the
  tropics, environmental conditions of high RH, extreme temperatures and
  intensive insolation together with alternating heavy rains are important
  factors. Year-round temperatures, which remain in the range suitable for the
  feeding and activity of insects, provide suitable conditions for ingestion of
  adequate doses of oral materials, such as bacteria. On the other hand, high
  temperatures reduce viability of such pathogenic forms as fungal conidia,
  viral polyhedral inclusions and protozoan spores. Thee conditions are critical
  not only during application but also during storage and transportation of the
  materials. Infectivity is dependent on different strains' response to
  temperature, the range of a material's activity. High temperatures accelerate
  the development of target insects and also that of infections, especially
  those caused by bacteria and viruses. In principle there is no difference in
  infectivity to different pathogens in the tropics and in mild climates, all
  pathogens isolated in mild regions can be used in the tropics and vice versa
  (Weiser 1984).           Changes in
  relative humidity also affect the efficiency of application of microbial
  insecticides. During storage high RH causes germination of some spores and
  ultimately their destruction. Products must be well formulated to guarantee a
  minimum of RH in the bulk material. This is the main reason for the increased
  demand for local production, which tends to avoid damage in storage and
  transportation. Not only the high RH but also extremes between dry periods before
  the rains come in savanna regions. During this dry period most entomophilic
  nematodes die or are so much reduced in distribution that their spread must
  begin again during the rainy season. Heavy rains may wash down any residue on
  plants, necessitating reapplication.           Another
  factor causing heavy losses on viability is solar radiation. In the tropics
  more than anywhere else it is important to direct an essential part of a
  particular microbial application to the lower parts of plants and under the
  leaves. Used in combination with treatments early in the morning or late in
  the afternoon, this may preclude the need for repeated treatments.  History Interest in
  using pathogens to control insects dates back over 100 years. Steinhaus
  (1975), Bassi (1835), Auduoin (1837) and LeConte (1874) and Metchnikoff
  (1879) suggested that pathogens might prove effective agents for controlling
  crop pests. But none of the early suggestions led to the successful
  deployment of pathogens. Renewed interest in the 20th Century followed the
  successful use of other natural enemies such as predaceous beetles and
  parasitic Hymenoptera. Control of the cottony cushion scale by natural
  enemies in the United States led to the establishment of permanent research
  programs by governmental agencies in the U.S. and several other countries
  aimed at using natural enemies, including pathogens, as pest control agents
  (Paillot 1933, Steinhaus 1975). Two early successes emerged from these
  programs, the development of Bacillus
  popilliae Dutky as a control
  agent for the Japanese beetle, Popillia
  japonica Newman, in the
  U,.S. (White & Dutky 1942), and use of the nuclear polyhidrosis virus
  (NPV) of the European spruce sawfly, Gilpinia
  hercyniae (Hartig), as a
  classical biological control agent in Canada (Balch & Bird 1944). Shortly after
  World War II, E. A. Steinhaus was hired by the University of California
  (Steinhaus 1963). Trained as a bacteriologist, Steinhaus was well aware of
  the success attained with B.
  popilliae and the G. hercyniae NPV, and he began an concentrated effort aimed
  at using insect pathogens, particularly bacteria and viruses as control
  agents. Although other researchers were influential in the development of
  insect pathology and microbial control (Cameron 1973), the modern era of
  these two closely related disciplines was due largely to the leadership of E.
  A. Steinhaus. He reemphasized the use of Bacillus
  thuringiensis Berliner as a
  biocontrol agent, and his studies and those of Hannay (1953) and Angus (1954)
  were important in the commercialization and its successful use as a microbial
  insecticide. Although earlier studying the NPV of the alfalfa caterpillar, Colias eurytheme Boisduval, Steinhaus focused attention on the
  potential of viruses as microbial insecticides. His studies of viral and
  bacterial diseases of insects, and other pioneering efforts in the field of
  insect pathology, invigorated studies of the fungi and protozoa as control
  agents, and were important to the development of the international fields of
  insect pathology and microbial control. Although there
  is an extensive literature on insect pathogens and microbial control, only
  one pathogen, B. thuringiensis is in routine use
  in control in industrialized countries, where it has been variously
  successful. It has been noted by many specialists that this pathogen is the
  one in which current interest regarding further development and use is the
  highest. He considered that it is worthwhile to consider why this is so
  because such an assessment identifies some of the key features required for a
  pathogen to be successful as a biological control agent. To do this requires
  a few definitions regarding the different ways in which pathogens are used or
  considered for use in insect control programs, and of the performance expectations
  by which the potential of insect pathogens and their degree of success are
  evaluated. The guiding
  principle is one of economics; the pathogens that will be developed and used
  are those that are the most cost-effective, either in the short or long term.
  Classical biological control is the most cost effective, but the best example
  in insects is the use of an NPV to control the European spruce sawfly in
  Canada. Pathogens may also be used in seasonal introductions. The protozoan Nosema locustae Canning has been used in this way to reduce
  grasshopper populations over a period of several weeks. The common strategy
  is to use pathogens as microbial insecticides, and because this strategy has
  proven quite successful with bacteria and viruses, it will probably see even
  greater future use. Depending on the target pest, applications may often be
  fewer than those required with a chemical insecticide because the pathogens
  are quite specific and typically do not kill predatory and parasitic insects.
  Also, the reproduction of the pathogen in the target insect, as is true of
  viruses, adds to the amount of the pathogen in the treated environment, and
  this can extend control and cost effectiveness. A single application can
  yield effective seasonal control when the pests have only one or a few
  generations. Performance
  expectations are important to consider when using pathogens. A successful
  pathogen reduces the pest to below an economic or transmission threshold
  routinely and reliably at a cost that is economical in proportion to the
  value of the crop or impact of the disease. Under most circumstances
  pathogens are evaluated on the basis of how they compare with chemical
  insecticides, leading to a microbial control agent paradox. Being generally
  agreed that the two properties of many chemical insecticides that were
  originally considered to be their best attributes are a broad spectrum of
  activity and a significant residual activity. Such properties are often
  responsible for the destruction of natural enemy populations and the
  production of insecticide resistance. But most insect pathogens have a narrow
  spectrum of activity and relatively poor residual activity. Although such are
  now considered desirable properties, until recently they have discouraged
  interest by industry in the development of many potentially useful pathogens
  because of the relatively high costs of development and registration in
  comparison to the likely return on investment. Therefore, when
  considering the economics of pesticide development, it is apparent why B. thuringiensis has been the most widely developed and used
  insect pathogen. It compares favorably with chemical insecticides in many
  crop and forest systems where lepidopterous insects are the key or major
  pests. It is relatively inexpensive, easy to produce and formulate for use
  and it acts rapidly. It has a rather narrow spectrum of activity and
  possesses a low residual activity. Nevertheless, the range of insects it
  controls continues to provide a market large enough to justify commercial development.
  As discussed in the section of medically important arthropods, this bacterium
  most likely has been responsible for halting development of many other
  biological control possibilities, even though the latter might offer longer
  range and more thorough success. Microbial
  pathogens which are used in pest control stem from four major groups of
  insect pathogens: viruses, bacteria, fungi and nematodes. Although nematodes
  sometimes are considered as parasitoids, the fact that they include in their
  activity the action of symbiotic bacteria, distinguishes them as a special
  group. Presently protozoa are not utilized on a large scale in field
  applications, but they may be useful in some integrated control situations . Cytoplasmic polyhedrosis
  viruses Use
  of Viruses as Insect Control Agents Many viruses
  affect insects that are potentially useful in biological control. They may be
  divided into about 10 different groups according to their localization and
  their appearance under the optical microscope. Most are very host specific.
  Their formation and reproduction is bound on the genetic substance of the
  nuclei (DNA viruses) and sometimes connected with RNA replication (cytoplasmic viruses). In all viruses
  the infection is also egg transmitted and in many cases direct feeding of
  infectious materials do not immediately result in apparent lethal infections
  (Weiser 1984). Inapparent infections may remain in a population and then may
  appear in the next generation if suitable stresses are applied. Among the
  stresses initiating outbreaks of latent infections are crowding, cold storage,
  and secondary infections with other pathogens. Most common are
  the nuclear polyhedrosis viruses
  (NPV), which appear as visible refringent irregular proteinic inclusions in
  the nuclei of the fat body, the hypoderm and other tissues. The nuclei are
  hypertrophic, which finally burst and the cell is destroyed. The host dies
  after a short period of time, and remains hanging on the last pair of larval
  legs. Its interior autolyses into a grey liquid with masses of refringent
  polyhedra, which do not stain with Giemsa. The polyhedra contain many virus
  rods. In the gut of the newly infected host the virus enters host cells and
  undergoes new development. Several NPVs are produced as formulated microbial
  insecticides. Most widely used is ELCAR against Heliothis, VIRIN NS against the gypsy moth, and VIRIN KS
  against the cabbage worm. There is also NPV available for control of
  caterpillars of Trichoplusia
  ni, the tussock moth, of Spodoptera littoralis and several other pests. It is essential to apply
  the virus against early stage larvae. In many cases the virus is only
  collected from outbreak areas and stored at 4°C for the next season. One Trichoplusia ni caterpillar is sufficient to
  treat one acre of infested alfalfa.  In sawflies the
  polyhedrosis is localized in the nuclei of the midgut. Several NPV's were
  used for control of important pests such as Neodiprion , Gilpinia
  and Trichiocampus. In these
  cases material was produced on collected caterpillars, stored and applied
  during the next season. Granuloses are another type of DNA virus with rodshaped virions, each
  closed in a proteinic capsule which is visible only in dark field. Among the
  broadly used viruses of this group are the granulosis of the fall webworm and
  codling moth.  Viral rods without
  a proteinic capsule are those of the baculovirus
  such as infects the rhinoceros beetle, Oryctes
  rhinoceros. This pest of
  coconut palms in southeast Asia and the Pacific, has an infection attacking
  mainly the midgut and causing heavy mortality. The virus is produced in
  rearing stations on collected grubs of the beetle and used for spraying the
  sprouts of palms, or late instar grubs are infected and eclosed adults
  released so that they carry the infection into habitats of the beetle via the
  feces. In many areas the infective level of the virus in the field is much
  reduced and a recolonization of the infection with infected grubs is relied
  upon. Less commonly
  used in field applications are the cytoplasmic
  polyhedrosis viruses, which are common in the cytoplasm of midgut
  cells of many caterpillars. They are usually not used alone but in
  conjunction with other pathogens, such as microsporidia. A specific virus
  group are the pox viruses which are localized in the cytoplasm of fat body
  cells, with large oval polyhedra with cushion-shaped virus particles. They
  are not very infectious and are not tested as microbial pathogens. Some non
  occluded viruses are important factors in reduction of very specific pests,
  as is the densonucleosis virus
  of the greater wax moth. The latter is very infectious, but easily
  inactivated due to lack of a protective coating. The group of iridoviruses is
  a natural control factor of mosquitoes and blackflies, of grubs of some
  beetles (e.g., Sericesthis),
  craneflies and others. Collecting infected
  individuals in the field and storing them with care to suppress bacterial
  growth may produce viruses locally. Dry material remains viable for at least
  one year. A second step is the controlled production on caterpillars
  collected in nature or reared from eggs and infected in rearing cages in the
  laboratory. A third sophisticated step is the mass production on artificial
  media. This type of rearing avoids the usual contamination with other
  pathogens such as cytoplasmic polyhedrosis, bacteria or protozoa (Weiser
  1984).  Viruses are
  obligate intracellular parasites, and as such must be grown in living hosts.
  Insect viruses must be grown either in insects or in cultured insect cells,
  as there is no method known for growing viruses on artificial media. Most
  viruses that occur in insects belong to one of seven major taxonomic
  families, but generally they are divided into two broad non-taxonomic
  categories: occluded viruses
  and non-occluded viruses.
  Occluded viruses are occluded with a protein matrix after formation in
  infected cells, forming paracrystalline bodies that are referred to as either
  inclusion or occlusion bodies. Non-occluded viruses occur freely or
  occasionally form paracrystalline arrays of virions that are also called
  inclusion bodies. However, the latter have no occlusion body protein
  interspersed among the virions. In pest control,
  the biological properties of the viruses are more relevant than the physical
  and biochemical properties. The most important biological properties for the
  four most common virus types are as follows: Iridoviruses are non-occluded DNA viruses that replicate in the cytoplasm
  of a wide range of tissues in infected hosts, causing disease that is usually
  fatal. Virions can form paracrystalline arrays in infected tissues, imparting
  an iridescent aspect to infected hosts, from which the name of this virus
  group is derived. Over 30 types are known, and all have proven extremely
  difficult to transmit per os. Host range of each type is
  quite narrow based on natural occurrence in host field populations.
  Prevalence and mortality rates in natural populations of host insects are
  typically <1% (Kelly & Robertson 1973). Cytoplasmic polyhedrosis viruses are occluded RNA viruses that replicate and form large (ca.
  0.5-2 milimicrons) polyhedral to spherical occlusion bodies in the cytoplasm
  of midgut epithelial cells causing a chronic disease. Infection in early
  instars retards growth and development, extending the larval phase by several
  weeks, which in many cases is fatal. This is a relatively common type of
  virus found among lepidopterous insects, and dipterous insects of the
  suborder Nematocera (mosquitoes, blackflies, chironomids). Detailed studies
  on isolates shown them to be easy to transmit per os to
  the original host and other species of the same order, and therefore the host
  range of this virus type is probably the broadest among the insect viruses
  (Katagiri 1981). Entomopoxviruses are occluded DNA viruses which replicate in the cytoplasm of
  a wide range of tissues in most hosts, causing an acute fatal disease.
  Occlusion bodies, depending on the isolate, vary from being ovoidal to
  spindle-shaped and generally occlude 100 or more virions. They are most
  common from coleopterous insects, from which there are over 20 isolates, but
  also known from Lepidoptera, Diptera and Orthoptera. This virus type is
  easily transmitted per os, though the experimental
  host range of individual isolates seems relatively narrow, generally being
  restricted to closely related species (Granados 1981, Arif 1984). Occluded baculoviruses consist of two types: the granulosis viruses (GVs) and the
  nuclear polyhidrosis viruses (NPVs). Both types are highly infectious per os, and in some insects these viruses cause widespread
  epizootics that can result in significant declines of larval populations.  The NPVs occur
  in a wide range of insect orders as well as from Crustacea, but they are most
  common in Lepidoptera (>1,000 isolates). Many occur as distinct viral
  species. NPVs are easily transmitted per
  os and replicate in the
  nuclei of cells, generally causing an acute fatal disease. The occlusion
  bodies are referred to as polyhedra
  because of their typical shape. They are large (ca. 0.5-2 milimicrons), and
  form in the nuclei, where each occludes as many as several hundred virions.
  The NPVs of Lepidoptera infect a range of host tissues, but those of other
  orders are typically restricted to the midgut epithelium. Some NPVs have a
  narrow host range, and may only replicate efficiently in a single species,
  while others such as the AcNPV, e.g., of the alfalfa looper, Autographa californica (Speyer), have a relatively broad host range
  and are capable of infecting species from different genera (Granados &
  Federici 1986, Blissard & Rohrmann 1990). The GVs (ca. 200
  isolates) are closely related to the NPVs but differ from the latter in
  several important ways. GVs are only known from Lepidoptera. Like NPVs, they
  initially replicate in cell nuclei, but replication involves early lysis of
  the nucleus, which in the NPVs only occurs after most polyhedra have formed.
  After lyses, GV replication continues throughout the cell, which consists of
  a mixture of cytoplasm and nucleoplasm. When completely assembled, the
  virions are occluded individually in small (200 x 600 milimicron) occlusion bodies
  called granules. Many GVs
  primarily infect the fat body, while others have a broader tissue tropism and
  replicate throughout the epidermis, tracheal matrix and fat body. One GV of
  the grapeleaf skeletonizer, Harrisina
  brillians Barnes &
  McDunnough, only replicates in the midgut epithelium (Federici & Stern
  1990, Tweeten et al. 1981). Use of Viruses as Insect
  Control Agents The best example
  of the use of a virus as an insect control agent is the NPV of the European
  spruce sawfly, G. hercyniae, as a classical
  biological control (Balch & Bird 1944, Cunningham & Entwistle 1981).
  The European spruce sawfly was introduced into eastern Canada from northern
  Europe around the turn of the century and was a severe forest pest by the
  1930's. Hymenopterous parasitoids were introduced from Europe in the
  mid-1930's as part of a biological control effort, and carried the NPV, which
  was first detected in 1936. Natural epizootics caused by the virus began in
  1938, by which time the sawfly had spread to >31,000 km2.
  Sawfly populations were reduced to below economic thresholds by 1943. More
  than 90% of the control is attributed to the NPV. Although
  viruses, particularly NPVs, are often associated with rapid declines in the
  populations of important lepidopterous and hymenopterous pests, the G. hercyniae NPV is the only true example of a virus that has
  proven effective as a classical biological control agent. Another
  baculovirus, the non-occluded baculovirus of the palm rhinoceros beetle, Oryctes rhinoceros (L.) has been a partial biological control
  success as introduced into populations it can yield control for several
  years, but usually dissipates and must be reapplied against the pest
  population (Bedford 1981). Thus, the control potential of most viruses is
  best evaluated by assessing their utility as microbial insecticides. From
  this position, the iridoviruses are essentially useless because of their poor
  infectivity per os. Cytoplasmic polyhidrosis
  viruses are not appreciably better because, although highly infectious per os, the disease they cause is chronic (Aruga & Tanada
  1971, Payne 1981). CPVs have, nevertheless, been used in some situations,
  such as against the pine caterpillar, Dendrolimus
  spectabilis in Japan
  (Katagiri 1981). Entomopoxviruses have not yet been developed as control
  agents for any insect (Arif 1984, Granados 1981). NPV's as Conventional Microbial
  Insecticides.--Because NPVs
  are common in and easily isolated from pest populations, production in their hosts
  is relatively inexpensive, and the technology for formulation and application
  is simple and adaptable to standard pesticide application methods. Most NPVs,
  however, are narrow in their host range, infecting only a few closely related
  species. Several can be grown in
  vitro in small volumes, but
  no fermentation technology exists for their mass production commercially.
  Despite such drawbacks, several NPVs have been registered as microbial
  insecticides, though few are marketed. There is a renewed interest in
  developing NPVs as insecticides due to the adverse effects of chemical
  insecticides and their increasing costs and because recombinant DNA
  technology offers potential for improving the efficacy of these viruses.  Production and Formulation.--Viruses are mass produced in larval hosts grown on artificial
  diets or natural host plants. Larvae are infected per os at
  an advanced stage of development, and reared either in groups or individually
  for species which are cannibalistic. After virus ingestion, the occlusion
  bodies dissolve in the alkaline midgut, releasing virions. In Lepidoptera,
  the virus first invades midgut epithelial cells where during the firs 24 hrs
  of infection it undergoes an initial colonizing phase of replication in the
  nuclei of these cells. No occlusion bodies are produced in these nuclei, but
  rather the progeny virions migrate through the basement membrane, and invade
  and colonize almost all other tissues. In these a cycle of replication occurs
  during which the virions are occluded in polyhedra. Maximum production of
  polyhedra occurs in tissues that are the most nutrient rich and metabolically
  active such as the fat body, epidermis and tracheal matrix. This definitive
  phase of viral disease occurs over a period of 5-10 days, and represents
  several cycles of replication as the virus spreads throughout the tissues and
  invades most host cells. The actual length of the disease depends on several
  factors including the host and viral species, larval instar at the time of
  infection, amount of inoculum and temperature. Near the end of the disease,
  after most polyhedra have formed, the nuclei lyse. As more nuclei lyse, the
  larva eventually dies after which the body liquifies, releasing billions of
  polyhedra. In commercial production larvae may be harvested prior to
  liquefication to keep bacteria, which quickly colonize dead larvae, at a
  lower level in the final product. Antibiotics also can be added to the diet
  to combat bacteria. After the larval production phase is complete, the larvae
  are collected and formulated. Formulation varies considerably, and depends on
  how the virus will be used (Ignoffo 1973, Shapiro 1986). The production
  of lepidopteran GVs and sawfly NPVs is similar to that described lepidopteran
  NPVs (Cunningham & Entwistle 1981, Shapiro 1986). However, the sawfly
  NPVs differ from the lepidopteran NPVs in that the former only replicate and
  form polyhedra in midgut epithelial cells. Polyhedral yields are thus lower
  than those obtained with lepidopteran NPVs. NPV's and Economics / Efficacy.--The extent to which conventional NPVs can be used as microbial
  insecticides depends on several factors which include the relative importance
  of the target pest in the pest complex attacking a crop, the amount of virus
  that must be used to control the pest in both the short term and long term,
  the value of the crop, and the cost and availability of alternative control
  measures. NPVs are suited for use where a single lepidopteran species is the
  major pest for most of the growing season on a crop with a high cash value
  where other available pest controls are not cost effective. Examples are NPVs
  that are effective against insecticide-resistant species of Heliothis and Spodoptera on crops such as
  corn, sorghum and cotton, and more importantly on tomatoes, strawberries and
  floriculture. The cost-effectiveness of these viruses is determined by the
  amount of virus that must be applied and the frequency of application
  necessary to maintain the pest below the economic threshold. This will, of course,
  vary with the kinds of virus, pest, crop and in different parts of the world.
  The mount of virus required is assessed in terms of larval equivalents (LEs)
  necessary to achieve effective control (Ignoffo 1973). The number of LEs
  required to obtain effective control is a critical component in the
  determination of cost-effectiveness. This can range from 150 LEs per ha. per
  treatment using H. zea NPV to control Heliothis on cotton to 500 LEs
  for the S. exigua NPV on lettuce and
  chrysanthemums. Also, the number of LEs required to control a specific pest
  can vary with the crop due to differences in plant phenology and chemistry.
  For example, whereas 500 LEs/ha. may be required to control S. exigua on lettuce, the value may be as high as 1,000 LEs
  on alfalfa or as low as 100 LEs on strawberries. This kind of economic
  evaluation is essential for determining whether a specific NPV merits
  commercial development as well as use against a specific insect on a crop.
  Additional examples may be found in Fuxa (1990), Shapiro (1986, 1992), Payne
  (1982, 1988) and Pinnock (1975).  Limitations.--viruses are not extensively used in industrialized countries
  because chemical pesticides are readily available and effective, although
  this may change with increasing residue and resistance problems.
  Nevertheless, viruses in comparison to chemicals are relatively slow to kill,
  possess a narrow host spectrum of activity, have little residual activity and
  lack suitable cost-effective in
  vitro production. But these
  limitations have not inhibited the development and use of viruses in some
  developing countries where NPVs and even a few GVs are used, especially on
  field and vegetable crops. Included are India, China and Latin America,
  Africa and southeast Asia (McKinley et al. 1989, Moscardi 1989, 1990).
  Reasons are that chemicals are too expensive, their widespread and heavy use
  has resulted in resistance, labor costs for virus production in vivo are low, production technology is simple, and
  registration for their deployment is not required or is easily secured. Improvement of NPVs with Recombinant
  DNA.--Because conventional viral insecticides are relatively slow to
  kill and have a narrow host range, it is possible that both of these limitations
  may be overcome through the use of recombinant DNA technology (Miller 1988,
  Maeda 1989, Hawtin & Possee 1992). One approach to improving the efficacy
  of viruses is aimed at developing broad spectrum viruses that will cause a
  cessation of larval feeding within 24-48 hrs of infection. Engineering the
  viruses to express proteins such as enzymes or peptide hormones that disrupt
  larval metabolism, or peptide neurotoxins that paralyze or kill the insect
  directly does this. Because it already has a broader host range than most
  occluded baculoviruses, the AcNPV virus has been the subject of most of the
  engineering studies to 1995. The virus is engineered by placing the candidate
  gene under the control of a strong and late viral promoter. With this strategy,
  genes for juvenile hormone esterase (Hammock et al. 1990), B. thuringiensis endotoxins (Martens et al. 1990,
  Merryweather et al. 1990, Pang et al. 1992) and insecticidal neurotoxins from
  the straw itch mite, Pyemotes
  tritici, and the scorpions, Androctonus australis Hector, and Buthus epeus, have been engineered into the ACMNPV (McCutchen et
  al. 1991, Tomalski & Miller 1991). Of these the most promising has been
  the AcNPV expressing the P. tritici toxin, which shortened
  the time between infection and paralysis or death to less than 72 hrs in
  older larvae. Engineering
  viruses to express insecticidal proteins in many cases should also result in
  an expanded host range, because in many lepidopteran host species that do not
  develop a disease when infected by conventional viruses, there can be limited
  viral replication. The less susceptible hosts develop a mild disease and
  survive infection. But, the same hosts infected by an engineered virus that
  expresses a potent insecticidal protein will probably die because the virus
  does not need to replicate very much in order to paralyze or kill the larva. History of Bacillus thuringiensis Bacillus popilliae for Scarab Control Bacillus thuringiensis details -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sporeforming
  bacteria are the most important in biological control due to the possession
  of resistant stages. Among these are Bacillus
  thuringiensis, Bacillus pppilliae and Bacillus
  sphaericus.  History of Bacillus
  thuringiensis.--A history of B.
  thuringiensis given by
  Beegle & Yamamoto (1992) is paraphrased as follows: The Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner story began in the first decade of
  the 20th Century when the Japanese bacteriologist S. Ishiwata isolated the
  bacillus from diseased Bombyx
  mori (L.) larvae. He named
  it Sottokin, which means "sudden death bacillus." He described the
  pathology it causes in silkworm larvae and its cultural characteristics
  (Ishiwata 1905a). He also noted that many of the larvae that did not die when
  exposed to the bacillus were very weak and stunted. In a subsequent report
  (Ishiwata 1905b) he stated that "From these experiments the intoxication
  seems to be caused by some toxine, not only because of the alimentation of
  bacillus, the death occurs before the multiplication of the bacillus..."
  This showed that from the very beginning it was realized that a toxin was
  involved in the pathogenicity of B.
  thuringiensis. Ernst
  Berliner (1911, 1915) isolated a similar organism from diseased granary
  populations of Anagasta kuehniella (Zeller) larvae from
  Thuringia, Germany, which he named Bacillus
  thuringiensis, and because
  Ishiwata did not formally describe the organism he found, Berliner is
  credited with naming it.  Aoki &
  Chigasaki (1916) reported on their studies of Ishiwata's isolate, noting that
  its activity was due to a toxin present in sporulated cultures, but not in
  young cultures of vegetative cells. The toxin was not an exotoxin because it
  was not found in culture filtrates. It is obvious from their data on
  inactivation of the toxin by acids, phenol, mercuric chloride, and heat that
  they had a protein. Nothing further was accomplished with B. thuringiensis for over a decade, which was due perhaps to
  the fact that in Japan the Sotto disease was not a serious problem in
  silkworm culture and in Europe World War I was in progress. Berliner's
  isolate was lost, but in 1927 Mattes reisolated the same organism from the
  same host as did Berliner (Heimpel & Angus 1960a). Mattes' isolate was
  widely distributed to laboratories in various parts of the world, and most of
  the early commercial B. thuringiensis-based products
  and most of the early microbial control attempts used this isolate (Norris
  1970). Both Berliner and Mattes observed in addition to the spore, a second
  body, which they called a Restkörper in the developing sporangia. A serious
  problem with the European corn borer, Ostrinia
  nubilalis (Hübner) in corn
  in North America led to the formation of the International Group for Corn
  Borer investigation. At a meeting in Chicago, IL. it was proposed to attempt
  to use B. thuringiensis as a control
  agent (Briggs 1986). Under this program field trials were conducted in
  Hungary by Husz in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and Vouk and Metalnikov in
  Yugoslavia in the early 1930s. The results ranged from inconclusive to
  promising. The depressed economic conditions in the 1930s in North America
  resulted in an end to funding of the corn borer work (Heimpel & Angus
  1960a, Weisner 1986). But because of the promising nature of some of the B. thuringiensis field trials, commercial production was
  begun in France by Laboratoire Libec, and the product Sporeine became
  available in 1938. World War II stopped further production. Jacobs (1951)
  reported on the effectiveness of Sporeine, finding that he could protect
  flour from A. kuehniella by applying Sporeine
  to the flour.  In the early
  1950s Steinhaus at the University of California at Berkeley published several
  articles (Steinhaus 1951, 1956a, 1956b) that stimulated interest in the
  United States in the use and commercial exploitation of B. thuringiensis
  as a microbial control agent of some lepidopteran pest insects. In 1951
  Steinhaus grew B. thuringiensis in large
  cafeteria trays containing nutrient agar, washed the spore-crystal complex
  off after sporulation, and used the recovered material in a successful field
  trial against Colias eurytheme Boisduval larvae on
  alfalfa (T. Angus 1988, pers. commun. to C. Beegle). Steinhaus knew a
  researcher with Cutter Laboratories in Berkeley, where antibiotics and
  vitamins were produced in aerated and agitated liquid media in relatively
  large fermenters. Cutter Laboratories then produced B. thuringiensis
  preparations for Steinhaus that he used successfully against C. eurytheme larvae (Briggs 1986). In 1956 Steinhaus and R.
  A. Fisher met with the president of Pacific Yeast Products, J. M. Sudarsky,
  to explore the practicality of producing a B. thuringiensis-based
  product (Heimpel 1972). Pacific Yeast Products (later Bioferm Corporation)
  was a yeast and vitamin B-12 producer in Wasco, CA. The decision was made to
  produce B. thuringiensis and by 1957 a
  product called Thuricide was available for testing. Thuricide was formulated
  as liquid concentrates, dusts, and wettable powders. Bioferm successfully
  petitioned the U. S. Food and Drug Administration for an exemption from residue
  tolerances of B. thuringiensis products on
  agricultural crops, on the presumption of safety toward beneficial insects,
  plants, humans and animals based on historical evidence (Briggs 1986). The
  Wasco facility in 1992 is owned by Sandoz, and is still producing a variety
  of B. thuringiensis products. In 1959 Nutrilite Products entered
  the market with their product Biotrol (Ignoffo 1973), which was produced by
  semisolid fermentation on a wheat bran medium. Several other U.S. Companies
  (Merck, Agritrol; Rohm & Haas, Bakthane; and Grain Producers,
  Parasporine) produced B. thuringiensis for short periods
  (van der Geest & van der Laan 1971). Besides the
  production of Sporeine in France in the late 1930s, there was the development
  of B. thuringiensis production and usage in European socialist
  countries in the 1950s. The 058 strain of B.
  thuringiensis subsp. thuringiensis was used by the
  Research Institute of Antibiotics in Roztoky, Czechoslovakia, to produce the product
  Bathurin in 10,000-L fermenters. This material was priced at 40 korunas per
  kilogram and was used for control of insect pests on vegetables and
  ornamentals, and in forests and orchards (Weiser 1986). In the former Soviet
  Union, the All Union Institute for Microbial Products for Plant Protection
  produced the product Entobaktrin using a B.
  thuringiensis subsp. galleriae isolate found by
  Isakova in 1956 (Isakova 1958). In Moscow, the government agency for the
  Direction of Microbial Industry started producing the product Dendrobacillin
  for use against larvae of the Siberian silkworm, Dendrolimus sibiricus
  Tshetverikov, a serious pest of conifers. E. V. Talahaev discovered the B.
  thuringiensis subsp. dendrolimus isolate used in the product in
  1954 from dead D. sibiricus larvae (Talalaev
  1956). The same facility also produced the product Insektin using a B. thuringiensis subsp. thuringiensis
  isolate. Insektin also was used for forest protection (Weiser 1986). In
  Yugoslavia the product Baktukal was produced by Serum Zavod, in Germany
  Hoechst produced Biospor, and in France Procidia produced Plantibac. Edward Steinhaus
  was perplexed that at sporulation in B.
  thuringiensis the spores
  were not centrally located, but they were rather displaced to one end. In
  1953 Steinhaus sought the advice of the Canadian bacterial morphologist C.
  Hannay regarding this phenomenon (T. Angus, 1988 pers. commun. to C. Beegle).
  Upon examining B. thuringiensis sporulated cells,
  Hannay noticed a second body in the sporangium, as had Berliner and Mattes.
  But Hannay went one step further and speculated that the parasporal inclusion
  bodies had some role in the pathogenicity of the bacterium toward susceptible
  lepidopterous larvae (Hannay 1953). Coincidentally in 1951 Steinhaus
  published a picture of a sporulated and lysed B. thuringiensis
  culture showing bipyramidal crystals, but did not make note of them in the
  text. T. A. Angus, a Canadian also was working with B. thuringiensis
  at the time, and Hannay sent Angus a copy of his manuscript prior to
  publication. Angus quickly proved that Hannay was correct, that the
  parasporal crystal was responsible for the toxicity of B. thuringiensis
  (Angus 1954). Angus showed that spores by themselves had not effect, and that
  dialyzed supernatant of alkali-dissolved crystals had the same toxic action
  as did the spore-crystal complex when fed to B. mori
  larvae. Angus also noted that toxicity varied with crystal count, and was
  independent of the number of spores present.  Beegle &
  Yamamoto (1992) concluded that the early years were not without problems. For
  about the first 10 years of B.
  thuringiensis commercial
  production, the amount and range of usage was limited because of low potency
  strains (nearly all subsp. thuringiensis)
  and inadequate standardization techniques. The latter were a result of a
  decision by Pacific Yeast Products Co. to optimize spore production in their
  fermentations. This eventually led to the acceptance of spore counts by the
  Pesticide Regulation Division of the USDA-ARS as a method to standardize B. thuringiensis-based products (Heimpel 1972). This was
  disastrous because there proved to be no reliable relationship between spore
  counts and insect killing power (Angus 1954, Menn 1960, McEwen et al. 1960,
  Hall et al. 1961, Mechalas & Dunn 1964, Krieg 1965b, Burgerjon 1965, Vago
  & Burges 1964, Burges 1967, Dulmage & Rhodes 1971). It was also an
  unsettled period in regards to the identification and classification of B. thuringiensis. Modern Isolate Discoveries.--According to Beegle & Yamamoto (1992), before 1970 the
  majority of B. thuringiensis products were
  based on subsp. thuringiensis,
  and often contained heat-tolerant Beta-exotoxin. These products were low in
  activity, having potencies from a few hundred to ca. 1000 IU per mg. These
  low potency products could not compete with chemical insecticides in either
  efficacy of cost because of expedient controls demanded by users at the time.
  Probable long-range effects on lowering Lepidoptera population vigor and
  densities as reported by Legner & Oatman (1962) & Oatman
  & Legner (1964) were not considered of sufficient expediency. The presence
  of Beta-exotoxin in some of the products resulted in the confusing host range
  and safety data that exist in the literature for those subsp. thuringiensis-based products.
  In 1962, Edouard Kurstak isolated another subspecies of B. thuringiensis
  from diseased A. kuehniella larvae from a flour
  mill at Bures sur Yvette near Paris, France (Kurstak 1962). He gave the
  isolates, designated K-17 and K-18 (short for AP.77.BX.17 and AP.77.BX.18),
  to A. M. Heimpel of the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture in 1962 and again in 1963
  (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). In 1970 Dulmage reported isolating from diseased
  Pectinophora gossypiella (Saunders) larvae
  an isolate he named HD-1 (Dulmage 1970). DeBarjac & Lemille (1970)
  examined the five isolates (AP.77.BX.17 and AP.77.BX.18 from Kurstak, K-17
  and K-18 from Heimpel and HD-1 from Dulmage) and found that on the basis of
  flagellar serotyping they were a new subspecies of B. thuringiensis,
  which they named kurstaki. One of the new
  subsp. kurstaki isolates
  (HD-1) was responsible for B.
  thuringiensis-based products
  being able to compete with chemical insecticides on the basis of efficacy and
  cost against insects such as Trichoplusia
  ni (Hübner) on cruciferous
  crops. The kurstaki isolate
  proved to be 20- to 200-fold more potent than the isolates in the existing
  commercial B. thuringiensis products (Dulmage
  1970). In 1970 Abbott Laboratories entered the market with Dipel, which was
  the first commercial preparation based on the new kurstaki isolate. It was not long before all companies
  producing B. thuringiensis-based produced in
  the United States were subsp. kurstaki.
  By 1992 several million kilograms of kurstaki-based
  products were produced annually in the United States with usage registered
  for almost 30 crops and against over 90 pest insect species worldwide. The
  single largest market for B.
  thuringiensis-based products
  by 1992 was against forest insect pests in North America. However, the
  market for kurstaki-based
  products in agriculture fell to about 20% of its peak in the mid-1970s, due
  largely to competition from synthetic pyrethroids. In the late 1970s a
  considerable amount of kurstaki-based
  B. thuringiensis product was used on cotton for Heliothis spp. Because HD-1 was
  not the most active isolate against Heliothis
  available, a number of the most promising isolates were evaluated in the
  laboratory and field tested. Of the cultures in the Brownsville, TX. U.S.
  Dept. Agriculture B. thuringiensis collection (now
  at Peoria, IL>0, HD-263, a kurstaki
  subsp. originally isolated by G. Ayerst from a dead Ephestia cautella
  (Walker) pupa found by H. Burges in England, proved to be superior against
  all Heliothis spp. tested.
  Three years of field testing against H.
  virescens (F.) on cotton
  showed HD-263 to be superior to HD-1 (Beegle 1983). But, even at very high
  application rates, HD-263-based material did not control H. virescens
  larvae as well as the synthetic pyrethroid chemicals. Discovery of isolates
  with superior activity against H.
  virescens caused Adang et
  al. (1983) to clone the crylA(c)
  gene that codes for a crystal protein that is highly toxic to Heliothis spp. (Hofte &
  Whiteley 1989). In the mid-1980s Ecogen Corporation tried to develop a B. thuringiensis product using genetically manipulated
  isolates containing the crylA(c)
  gene. Although Ecogen created HD-263-derived isolates much more potent than
  the original isolate, the higher laboratory potency was never translated into
  similar field performance (I. Gard 1987, pers. comm. to C. Beegle).
  Eventually Ecogen abandoned this project. The question of why B. thuringiensis-based products are not effective against Heliothis spp. on cotton is
  unclear especially as there are formulations which are certainly potent
  enough to Heliothis spp.,
  especially H. virescens. Beegle &
  Yamamoto (1992) believed the reason is that Heliothis during most of its larval life on cotton is a
  covert feeder, spending most of its time inside the squares and bolls.
  Because B. thuringiensis has to be
  ingested to be effective, all the potency is not going to do any good if the
  target pest insect does not consume the applied material. During the period
  that Abbott Laboratories was attempting to penetrate the cotton insect pest
  control market with Dipel, nearly 100 adjuvants were examined in hopes of
  finding one that would result in B.
  thuringiensis being
  adequately effective against Heliothis
  spp. on cotton (T. Couch, 1985, pers. comm. C. Beegle). Beegle & Yamamoto
  (1992) thought it might take the development of a highly effective bait for
  use with B. thuringiensis crystal toxin
  gene(s) and expressing high levels of crystal toxin (Perlak et al. 1990), for
  b. thuringiensis to be adequately effective against Heliothis spp. on cotton. Another
  commercial used kurstaki
  isolate, NRD-12, was discovered by Normand Dubois of the U.S. Dept. of
  Agriculture Forest Service (Dubois 1985). It was significantly more active
  against Spodoptera exigua (Hübner) larvae than
  HD-1. But, Moar and associates presented evidence that this was true only
  when the HD-1 isolate being compared with NRD-12 is missing the crylA(b) crystal toxin gene
  which codes for a toxin that is especially active against S. exigua larvae (Moar et al. 1989, 1990). NRD-12 is a unique
  kurstaki isolate because it
  produces considerable levels of heat-tolerant exotoxin under conditions
  favorable for production of such exotoxin. The other subsp. kurstaki isolate that is known
  to produce measurable amounts of heat tolerant exotoxin is 62B-1-(4)
  discovered by Michio Ohba in Japan (Ohba et al. 1981). In the mid-1980s
  Sandoz registered the product Javelin, based on NRD-12, with the U.S.
  Environmental Protection Agency. In late 1985 Sandoz replaced NRD-12 with
  another subsp. kurstaki
  isolate which did not produce detectable levels of heat-tolerant exotoxin,
  but was as active as NRD-12 against S.
  exigua larvae, for use in
  the product Javelin Current subsp. kurstaki-based
  commercial products listed by Beegle & Yamamoto (1992). The worldwide
  market for kurstaki-based
  products for forestry and agriculture was estimated at $20-25 million in the
  U.S. in 1992 (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Goldberg &
  Margalit (1977) discovered B.
  thuringiensis isolates with
  mosquito larvicidal activity after screening ca. 1000 isolates from 10 soil
  samples taken from known mosquito larval breeding sites in Israel. Only 1% of
  the isolates showed mosquito larvicidal activity, but one (ONR60A) had
  extremely high activity. The new isolate was classified as B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis
  (de Barjac 1978), and had a good level of activity and killing speed.
  Mortality of Aedes aegypti (L.) larvae could occur
  as soon as 30 min. after exposure (Singer 1980) and with an LC-50 as low as
  22 ppb (Dame et al. 1981). Goldberg obtained a U.S. patent on the organism
  and assigned the patent to the U.S. government (Goldberg 1979). By 1992 both
  U.S. and European companies were producing and marketing subsp. israelensis-based products for
  use against mosquito and blackfly larvae. The worldwide market for israelensis-based products was
  ca. $10-US million. Keio Aizawa of
  Kyushu University in Japan discovered an isolate in 1962 that Bonnefoi &
  de Barjac (1963) determined as a new subspecies, naming it aizawai. Subsp. aizawai isolates were
  particularly effective against Galleria
  mellonella (L.) and Spodoptera spp. larvae.
  However, no B. thuringiensis isolate is nearly
  as active against Spodoptera
  spp. larvae as are the best isolates against the larvae of such species at T. ni and H.
  virescens. When beekeepers
  lost the use of certain effective insecticides for killing G. mellonella larvae in honey combs, Sandoz recognized that
  empty niche and developed their product Certan, based on an aizawai isolate, for control of
  G. mellonella larvae in honey comb. The market was small at
  ca. $50,000 U.S. per year. By 1992 the
  latest new B. thuringiensis subspecies to be
  found that had commercial promise was tenebrionis,
  which was found by Krieg and associates in diseased Tenebrio molitor
  L. (Krieg et al. 1983), and is active against other Coleoptera. Herrnstadt et
  al. 91986) of Mycogen Corp reported finding a B. thuringiensis
  isolate active against coleopterous larvae, naming it B. thuringiensis
  subsp. san diego. Krieg et al. (1987) compared the two isolates, tenebrionis and san
  diego, and found them to be identical
  in terms of biochemistry; serology; antibiotic and chemotherapeutic
  inhibition; plasmid DNA; crystal morphology, solubility, and protein pattern;
  and host range. As the two isolates appeared identical, and tenebrionis was described
  first, it follows that tenebrionis
  is the correct name for the subspecies and the name "san diego"
  should only be used to designate the particular isolate of subsp. tenebrionis that Mycogen
  utilized. In 1988 Mycogen brought out its product M-One based on its isolate,
  primarily for use against larvae of Leptinotarsa
  decemlineata (Say) on
  potatoes. M-One was reported effective against small L. decemlineata
  larvae in warm weather, but was less effective in cool weather or against
  large larvae (Ferro & Lyon 1991; Zehnder & Gelernter 1989). Because
  of the problem of resistance to chemical insecticides by L. decemlineata
  in some potato growing areas, subsp. tenebrionis-based
  products have become the preferred L.
  decemlineata control
  product. In those areas it was noticed that a reduction in the level of
  resistance to synthetic pyrethroids in L.
  decemlineata occurred. This
  accidental discovery suggested the possibility of managing resistance to both
  control agents by alternating usage of each (D. Ferro, 1992, pers. commun. C.
  Beegle). Ecogen received registration for its product Foil in 1992, which was
  a combination f subsp. kurstaki
  and subsp. tenebrionis for
  use against both lepidopterous and coleopterous pests on potatoes. Beegle
  & Yamamoto (1992) listed a number of subsp. tenebrionis-based products). Characteristics.--Bacillus thuringiensis causes extended
  mortality in nature among lepidopterous insect epizootics or in mass culture.
  High mortalities appear in dense populations of stored product pests, such as
  Ephestia kühniella, Plodia interpunctella
  and others, in the rearing of silkworms and in laboratory mass rearings of
  insects in general. The rather thick, clear staining rod of this bacillus
  produces a diamond-shaped refringent crystal
  of proteinic material in addition to the spore itself, which is the
  seat of its activity. The crystal dissolves in the midgut of Lepidopteran
  caterpillars to a toxin that
  attacks the membranes of midgut cells and finally kills the host. In other
  hosts the Lep-toxin does not find proper conditions for its activation and is
  harmless. Therefore, it is safe for all organisms including humans and other
  vertebrates. Conditions in different caterpillars differ slightly, and there
  are of the >1,000 known isolates, groups of strains which have some specific
  affinity to specific hosts. With flagellar antigens the strains are divided
  into more than 20 serotypes differing also in some principal details such as
  their activity against noctuids and large caterpillars, activity against the
  wax moth, etc. Strains are selected for mass production for controlling
  caterpillars of agricultural pests. Serological grouping does not dictate the
  general virulence of a strain and it can be isolated with minimum or maximum
  virulences. Improvement of the virulence is achieved by selection, optimum
  medium for cultivation and passing over selected host insects. With increased
  virulence the time between administration and mortality is reduced, from a
  usual five days to three or less.  Bacillus
  thuringiensis is produced in
  large fermentors, dried, blended with inert ingredients, emulgators and
  stickers. It must be stored in the dry state. Ready mixtures have to be used
  during the same day. It is administered as a food and for maximum effect must
  be ingested in adequate quantity. Applications on the first three instars of
  a caterpillar are preferable. Spores on leaves are damaged by ultraviolet
  light and usually retain their activity for <1-week. Spraying from below
  and to the sides of plants is recommended. Biological activity of a
  preparation is determined on the basis of comparison with a standard of Heliothis or Lymantria. Local target insects
  can also be used for comparison with a standard. The activity is expressed in
  bio-units (Weiser 1984). Some serotypes
  are able to produce a soluble exotoxin.
  This is released into the liquid fermentation medium and may be removed by
  centrifugation. However, it remains in the total spray-dried formulations
  because it is a thermostable toxin. This toxin interferes with DNA-dependent
  RNA polymerase and it is a general rather than nonspecific poison. Its active
  dose for insects has a safe range far below vertebrate activity, but it is
  not yet used broadly in pest control. In the Soviet Union this kind of
  material is used for the control of housefly maggots and the Colorado potato
  beetle and other pests. In low doses treated animals develop teratologies in
  their moth parts and legs. Bacillus
  thuringiensis preparations
  are used for the control of most lepidopteran pests of agriculture (Legner
  & Oatman (1962) & Oatman & Legner (1964)). Due to their
  nontoxicity to the honeybee, they can be used on flowering plants. The usual dosage
  is 0.5-1.5 kg/ha of the preparation, according to density of the treated
  crop. Material is used in a water suspension. Lepidoptera are divided into
  three major groups of susceptibility. Most susceptible are Pieris, Plutella, Tortricidae, bagworms and moths. Here the dosage
  is 0.2-0.5 kg/ha. The second group contains most caterpillars, mainly the
  Noctuidae, armyworms, budworms, large caterpillars, etc., where the dosage is
  1-1.5 kg/ha. In the third group there are hidden caterpillars (e.g., codling moth)
  that do not normally access treated leaves, or exceptionally resistant
  species such as Spodoptera. Bacillus
  thuringiensis may be used in
  a mixture with insecticides. Generally the bacillus is introduced to a
  diluted insecticide to avoid damage to from solvents. Mixtures are not
  recommended because they usually are made with reduced content of insecticide
  and after expiration of the microbial agent the sublethal insecticide may
  produce resistance. There is no resistance to B. thuringiensis
  beyond normal fluctuation of activity after 30 generations of genetic stress
  and pressure (Weiser 1984). The strain used most in agriculture is H-3
  kurstaki. For specific treatment of the wax moths the serotype H-7 aizawai
  was developed. Of economically important nontarget insects the silkworm is
  the only endangered species and where sericulture is developed proper care
  must be taken to avoid its introduction into the cultures. This danger is
  analogous to that from insecticides. There is good adaptation of B. thuringiensis preparations to entomophagous insects. The
  five-day phase before full mortality enables parasitoids to finish their
  development and active adult parasitoids are not encumbered. The shelf life
  of dry formulated powders is >2 years, the spores and crystal toxin remain
  active for more than 15 years. Moisture usually causes spore germination and
  decreases the activity of the preparation. Among the many
  isolates there are some strains with activity for beetles, but their
  development as microbial insecticides has not been accomplished.  The serotype
  H-14 (B. thuringiensis israelensis) is a very
  important strain which infects and kills mosquito and blackfly larvae. All
  tests have shown identical parameters of this strain with other strains. Only
  the endotoxin is entirely different, being nontoxic for Lepidoptera and
  highly toxic to mosquitoes. The crystal is more spherical and
  ultrastructurally is composed of two different substances. The larvae respond
  after feeding for three hours with a symptom of knock down, hanging
  motionless on the surface. Once this symptom appears there is no recovery for
  the larvae and they die in 24-48 hrs. The active concentration of the
  bacteria ranges from 500-1,000 cells/ml. Due to the ecological range of
  distribution of mosquito larvae in shallow water, the volume factor does not
  need to be calculated and a dosage of 1 kg/ha of wettable powder for
  treatment of mosquito habitats is usual. The difference in feeding of early
  and late instar larvae is not very important and therefore treatments are
  timed for the period of older larvae, before pupation. The treatment does not
  hold longer than one week and must be repeated when last instar larvae are
  again present. Bacteria are filtered away by different aquatic organisms
  (e.g., rotifers, ciliates, crustaceans, etc.). If large dosages are used,
  some chironomid midges are damaged. For the treatment of running water that
  contain larvae of blackflies, it is necessary to provide a concentration of
  1.5 mg/l of Tecnar or Vectobac for 10 min., by continuous release of the
  concentrate. Other bacteria
  are less commonly used in field application. Bacillus sphaericus
  is specific only for mosquitoes. Bacillus
  popilliae was used earlier
  for control of such grubs as Popillia
  japonica in the United
  States. The bacterium has a large parasporal body and infects grubs by
  feeding but only very slowly. It was mass produced by injection of
  pasteurized spores into normal field collected grubs. Dying or dead infected
  grubs were triturated with talcum or bentonite and the mixture was dusted
  over lawns infected with grubs. Several local strains occur in populations of
  different grubs in Australia and New Zealand and Weiser (1984) believed they
  must be present also in other areas. Bacteria are
  relatively simple unicellular microorganisms lacking internal organelles such
  as a nucleus and mitochondria, and reproduce by binary fission. With few
  exceptions most bacterial used as microbial insecticides grow readily on a
  wide variety of inexpensive substrates, a characteristic which facilitates
  their production. Most bacterial currently in use or under development as
  microbial control agents for insects are spore-forming members of the
  bacterial family Bacillaceae, in the genus Bacillus. Such pathogenic bacilli occur in healthy and
  diseased insects, but they also occur and can be isolated from many other
  habitats including granaries, plants, frass, soil and aquatic environments. Biological Properties.--Two major types of bacteria used in insect control are
  those which cause fatal infectious diseases and those which kill insects
  primarily through the action of insecticidal toxins. Bacillus popilliae
  Dutky is an example of the firs type. It is a bacterium that infects and
  kills Coleoptera larvae, particularly soil-inhabiting Scarabaeidae. The
  second type is Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner, a
  species which produces toxins, both protein endotoxins and nucleotide
  exotoxins, that are able to kill insects whether or not they are directly
  associated with the bacterium. Biologists have made extensive use of the
  latter property by inserting the genes encoding various endotoxins into other
  microorganisms and plants thereby making them insecticidal (Fischoff et al.
  1987, Vaeck et al. 1987. Perlak et al. 1990, Raymond et al. 1990).  Bacillus popilliae for Scarab
  Control Scarab milky
  disease was first discovered over 50 years ago (Dutky 1937, 1963). It is
  caused by B. popilliae and B. lentimorbus. The term "milky" derives from the
  opaque white color characterizing diseased larvae which results from the
  accumulation of sporulating bacteria in the hemolymph. The disease in
  initiated when grubs feeding on the roots of grasses or other plants ingest
  the spores, the latter than germinating in the midgut and vegetative cells.
  They invade the midgut epithelium where they grow and reproduce, changing in
  form as they progress toward invasion of the hemocoel (Splittstoesser et al.
  1978). After passing through the basement membrane of the midgut, the
  bacteria colonize the hemolymph over a period of several weeks and sporulate
  reaching populations of 108 cells per ml. The disease is fatal if
  the larvae ingest a sufficient numbers of spores early in development, and
  dead larvae become foci for spores which can serve as a source for infection
  for over 30 years (Klein 1981). One drawback of B. popilliae and its close relatives is that suitable media
  for their growth and mass production in
  vitro are not available.
  This has encumbered both research and large scale commercial development of B. popilliae. Commercial development is from field-collected
  scarab larvae. Such larvae are collected from field populations, injected
  with spores, and held in environmental chambers for 1-2 weeks until the
  bacteria have sporulated and killed most of the larvae. Drying and grinding
  larvae then make powdered formulations of the bacterial spores. Such
  preparations may be applied to soils infested with grubs at rates of ca. 1
  kg. of formulation per ha. Although treatment can be expensive, a single
  treatment typically lasts for 10 years. Bacillus
  thuringiensis This bacterium
  has been the most widely used insect pathogen to date. A complex of bacterial
  subspecies comprises this bacterium, all of which are typified by the
  production of a parasporal body during sporulation. This parasporal body
  contains one or more proteins, often in crystalline form, many of which are
  highly toxic to certain insects. In the insecticidal isolates, the toxins are
  known as endotoxins and often
  occur in the parasporal body as protoxins which after ingestion are activated
  by proteolysis in the gut. The activated toxins destroy midgut epithelial
  cells, causing death. Systematics & Biology.--B. thuringiensis
  is very closely related to Bacillus
  cereus, which is separated
  by the occurrence of the parasporal body in the former (Baumann et al. 1984).
  It seeps that in almost all known isolates of B. thuringiensis,
  the proteins which make up the parasporal body are encoded on plasmids borne
  by the bacteria. These plasmids can be lost during growth and reproduction,
  which can change the description to B.
  cereus, using conventional
  identification and classification. At least several
  thousand isolates of B. thuringiensis have been obtained
  from a variety of sources by 1991. These include soil, frass, grain dust,
  water, and living and dead insects. They are divided into groups, of which
  there are nearly 30 (De Barjac & Frachon 1990), that are differentiated
  on the basis of the H antigen, i.e., flagellar serotype, which is indicated
  by a number or a number and letter combination (e.g., H3a3b, etc.) as well as
  a serovar name (e.eg., H-1 thuringiensis,
  H3a3b kurstaki). A list of
  the H antigen types and serovar names as of 1990 is provided by Beegle &
  Yamamoto (1992). The H antigen and serovar are usually used to identify a
  specific isolate, although the serovar name is often referred to as either a
  subspecies or variety (e.g., B.
  thuringiensis subsp. thuringiensis, or B. thuringiensis var. thuringiensis).
   Beegle &
  Yamamoto (1992) pointed out that B.
  thuringiensis began as an
  independent species distinguishable from other bacilli, such as B. cereus Frankland & Frankland. It is close to B. cereus except that it produces a crystal at sporulation
  (sometimes more than one), which is usually bipyramidal in shape (sometimes
  square, flat or amorphous), and is toxic to lepidopterous, dipterous or
  coleopterous insect larvae. This resulted in some taxonomic problems, and
  some bacterial taxonomists felt that B.
  thuringiensis should be a
  subspecies of B. cereus (Smith et al. 1952,
  Bordon et al. 1973). This is based on such observations as certain strains of
  B. thuringiensis and B.
  cereus both killed mice when
  injected intraperitoneally (Lamanna & Jones 1963); the spores of both
  shared common antigens (Yoder & Nelson 1960; Lamanna & Jones 1961)
  and showed cross sensitivity to bacteriophages (Yoder & Nelson 1960); it
  was not possible to separate B.
  cereus and B. thuringiensis by crossed immunoelectrophoresis of
  ultrasonic extracts of sporefree-grown vegetative cells (Hartung &
  Hellsmann 1987); some B. anthracis Cohn strains were
  sensitive to bacteriophage from B.
  thuringiensis (Yoder 7
  Nelson 1960); it was not possible to separate B. cereus
  and B. thuringiensis isolates by fatty acid patterns (Vivoli
  & Fabio 1967, Kaneda 1967, 1968); the flagellar antigens of some B. thuringiensis and B.
  cereus isolates overlapped
  (Krieg 1970); there was a close enzymoserological relationship (casein
  precipitating proteinases) (Sandvik 1973); thin-sectioned spores appeared
  identical in fine structure (Gerhardt et al. 1976); and of greatest
  importance, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) homologies of 80-101% (Kaneko et al.
  1978) and 54-80% (Seki et al. 1978). Singer (1980) believed that strains of
  bacteria having greater than 70% DNA homology belong to the same species. On the other
  hand, there are a number of reports that support separate species status for B. thuringiensis. For example, Somerville & Jones (1972)
  believed they could distinguish between B.
  thuringiensis and B. cereus by DNA competition studies; Krieg (1965a) reported
  that he could differentiate B.
  thuringiensis isolates from B. cereus isolates with immunofluorescence and
  phase-microscopy; and O'Donnell et al. (1980) using pyrolysis gas-liquid
  chromatography were able to show that pyrograms of B. cereus
  and B. thuringiensis isolates were consistently different and
  allowed the separation of a large number of isolates of each species into
  distinct, non-overlapping groups. Additionally, Rogoff & Yousten (1969)
  listed several biochemical characteristics by which B. thuringiensis
  isolates could be distinguished from those of B. cereus.
  As more flagellar serotypes of thuringiensis
  were found, and the importance in some cases of the crystal serotype became
  apparent (Krywienczyk et al. 1978), the taxonomic scheme of Smith became
  increasing cumbersome. By 1992 most researchers used the taxonomic scheme
  where B. thuringiensis was considered a
  separate species. With increasing
  commercial importance, and numerous obviously different isolates discovered,
  the need for a method to identify and classify B. thuringiensis
  subspecies was apparent. The first real effort was made by Heimpel &
  Angus (1958, 1960b) based on morphology and biochemistry. DeBarjac &
  Bonnefoi (1962, 1968, 1973) and de Barjac (1981) developed an identification
  and classification based on serological analysis of vegetative cell flagellar
  (H) antigens plus biochemical characteristics. Norris (1964) advanced an
  identification and classification method based on analysis of esterase
  patterns of vegetative cells by starch gel electrophoresis. Norris found that
  although there were striking similarities between groupings of B. thuringiensis isolates by esterase and H-antigen analyses,
  he felt esterase analysis had several advantages. Esterase analysis could
  distinguish between subsp. sotto
  and dendrolimus, which
  H-antigen analysis could not, and esterase analysis was much faster than
  either biochemical or serological analysis. Bacillus thuringiensis
  heat-stable somatic O-antigens (Ohba & Aizawa 1978, Sekijima & Ono
  1982) , lectins (De Lucca 1984), crystal serology (Krywienczyk & Angus
  1960, Krywienczyk et al. 1978, Smith 1987), and phages (Jones et al. 1983)
  have also been examined for usefulness in identifying or classifying, or
  both, B. thuringiensis isolates (Beegle
  & Yamamoto 1992). Flagellar serotyping became the method of choice largely
  because the Institut Pasteur provided a flagellar serotyping service to
  scientists wishing their newly found isolates serotypes. By 1992 there were
  36 generally recognized B. thuringiensis subspecies based
  on serotype and some biochemical and host range information, but de Barjac
  & Frachon (1990) proposed abandoning the use of biochemical and host
  range information as well as the subspecies concept in B. thuringiensis
  classification. They suggested restricting the identification and
  classification of B. thuringiensis strains to only
  the serology of vegetative cell flagella, and using the term serovar to
  designate the different groups, of which they recognized 34. One limitation
  of their scheme was that a group such as subsp. tenebrionis, which is very unique in host range, crystal
  morphology, crystal toxin gene, and crystal protein chemistry, did not merit
  separate status.  Effective
  techniques that have been applied to the identification and classification of
  B. thuringiensis are high performance liquid chromatography
  (HPLC), plasmid mapping, and cloning and sequencing of the crystal toxin
  genes. Yamamoto (1983) isolated 135-kDa crystal protein by column
  chromatography, digested the protein with trypsin, and mapped the resulting
  peptides using reverse-phase HPLC. The results indicate that HPLC can
  distinguish crystal types within a serotype with great detail and
  reproducibility. Bacillus thuringiensis cells contain one
  or more plasmids, and it was determined that the crystal toxin genes are
  harbored in the plasmids in most strains (Gonzalez & Carlton 1982, 1984;
  Whiteley et al. 1982; Schnepf & Whiteley 1981; Ward & Ellar 1983;
  Held et al. 1982; Klier et al. 1982, 1983; Kronstad et al. 1983; Gonzalez et
  al. 1982). There have been several reports showing that plasmid profile
  (number and molecular weights of cell plasmids) can be used to identify B. thuringiensis strains (Iizuka et al. 1981, Lereclus et al.
  1982, Jarrett 1983, Gonzalez & Carlton 1980, Gonzalez et al. 1981). The
  latest developments have been the identification and sequencing of the genes
  that code for the crystal toxins (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Hofte &
  Whiteley (1989) proposed a nomenclature and classification scheme for crystal
  genes (cry) based on their
  phenotype, types of crystal proteins produced, and the protein's host range
  as insecticidal toxins. Some biochemists and molecular biologists believe
  that a taxonomic system for B.
  thuringiensis based on
  flagellar serotypes is no longer appropriate because the primary interest in
  this organism is its ability to kill insects, and we now have the ability to
  determine the DNA sequences of the crystal toxin genes that determine the
  level and degree of its activity. Principal Pathotypes.--There are three major pathotypes according to whether they exhibit
  toxicity to either Diptera, Lepidoptera or Coleoptera. Most isolates and
  subspecies are from Lepidoptera, which until the 1970's was the only
  pathotype know. The first isolate with substantial toxicity to Diptera,
  principally to mosquito and blackfly larvae, was the ONR 60A isolate of B. thuringiensis subsp. israelensis
  (H 14) DeBarjac discovered in Israel in 1976 (Goldberg & Margalit 1977,
  De Barjac 1978). The first isolate with high toxicity to Coleoptera was B. thuringiensis subsp. morrisoni
  (H8a8b), discovered in Germany (Krieg et al. 1983). The most common pathotype
  has continued to be from Lepidoptera.  Insecticidal Protein Types.--The
  insecticidal proteins that occur in the parasporal bodies of B. thuringiensis are referred to in general as delta-entotoxins,
  the delta designating a particular class of toxins, and endotoxin referring
  to their localization within the bacterial cell after production as opposed
  to being secreted. With new recombinant DNA techniques and the discovery in
  the early 1980's that delta-endotoxins were encoded by genes carried on
  plasmids, a major research effort developed to understand the genetic and
  molecular biology of the toxins. This led to cloning and sequencing of many B. thuringiensis genes and characterization of the toxicity
  of individual gene products. Hofte & Whiteley (1989) summarized this work
  through 1988. A variety of names and terminology was used to refer to B. thuringiensis insecticidal proteins and genes, and Hofte
  & Whitely (1989) proposed a simplified terminology for naming all
  insecticidal B. thuringiensis proteins and the
  genes encoding them. The terminology is based on the spectrum of activity of
  the proteins as well as on their size and apparent relatedness, suggested
  from nucleotide and amino acid sequence data. All genes sequenced to 1992,
  except a 27-kDa protein from B.
  thuringiensis. subsp. israelensis, appear related,
  and probably were derived from the same ancestral gene. Hofte & Whiteley
  called these cry, for crystal,
  genes and the proteins they encoded Cry
  proteins. This is followed by a numeral which indicates pathotype (I & II
  for toxicity to Lepidoptera, III for Coleoptera and IV for Diptera), followed
  by an upper case letter indicating the chronological order in which genes
  with significant differences in nucleotide sequences were described. The I
  and II for Lepidoptera-toxic proteins also indicate size differences, with
  the I referring to proteins of ca. 130 kDa, and the II to those of 65-70 kDa.
  Sometimes a lower case letter in parentheses is included, indicating minor
  differences in the nucleotide sequence within a gene type. Therefore, CryIA
  refers to a 130 kDa protein toxic to Lepidoptera for which the first gene
  (cryIA) was sequenced, while CryIVD refers to a 70 kDa protein with
  mosquitocidal activity for which the encoding gene was the 4th from this
  pathotype sequenced. The 27-kDa CytA protein that was first isolated from B. thuringiensis israelensis
  differs from other B. thuringiensis proteins not only
  in its smaller size, but also in that it is highly cytolytic to a wide range
  of cell types in vitro, including those of
  vertebrates (Chilcott et al. 1990, Federici et al. 1990). Also, it shares no
  apparent relatedness with Cry proteins. Because of these differences and its
  broad cytolytic activity, it is referred to as the CytA protein encoded by
  the cytA gene (Hofte & Whiteley 1989).  Activity Spectrum & Toxicity
  Genetics.--Two features are
  common to most genes regardless of pathotypes (Hofte & Whitely 1989).
  First, most proteins share in common five blocks of highly conserved amino
  acids. These blocks are distributed over the molecule from amino acid
  position 153 to ca. 680. Secondly, there is a variable region between, in the
  C-terminal portion of the activated toxin core. The conserved regions are
  believed to comprise the structural domains that account for the toxicity of
  most Cry proteins, while the variable region defines the spectrum of activity
  or host range. Ge et al. (1989)
  gave experimental evidence for the latter. Composition of Pathotypes &
  Shape of Parasporal Body.--The shape of the parasporal body is a reasonable indicator of
  an isolate's pathotype. Most isolates of B.
  thuringiensis produce a large
  bipyramidal parasporal crystal (0.5 x 1 micro-m.) that is almost always only
  toxic to Lepidoptera (Heimpel & Angus 1963, Moar et al. 1989). The
  bipyramidal crystal may be accompanied by a smaller cuboidal crystal toxic to
  mosquitoes, such as occurs in B.
  thuringiensis kurstaki (Yamamoto &
  McLaughlin 1981). Other subspecies, such as B. thuringiensis
  israelensis (H 14) and the
  PG-14 isolate of B. thuringiensis morrisoni (H 8a8b) produce
  spherical parasporal bodies (0.7- 1 micro-m.) that are toxic primarily to
  Nematocera (mosquito and blackfly larvae). The "tenebrionis' strain of B. thuringiensis morrisoni
  (H 8a8b) produces a thin, square crystal that is toxic only to certain
  species of Coleoptera (Federici et al. 1990, Krieg et al. 1987).  Protein complexity
  within these parasporal bodies varies considerably. Single crystals might be
  composed of a single type of protein molecule or a mixture of as many as
  three. Also, a single parasporal body may be composed of 2-4 crystals
  (Federici et al. 1990, Hofte & Whiteley 1989). A simple crystal is found
  in the HD-73 isolate of B. thuringiensis kurstaki, where only the
  CryIA(c) protein is encoded and produced. This forms a typical bipyramidal
  crystal at sporulation. However, the HD1 isolate of the same subspecies carries
  five cry genes [cryIA(a),(b),(c);cryIIA; cryIIB] producing at least four of
  these during sporulation. The 3 CryA proteins crystallize together into a
  single bipyramidal crystal, while the smaller CryIIA protein forms the
  associated cuboidal inclusion. Most complicated of all combinations is found
  in B. thuringiensis israelensis,
  where the 3 CryIV proteins and CytA proteins crystallize into three inclusion
  types, bound together in a fibrous envelope (Federici et al. 1990). Toxins Produced by B. thuringiensis.--There
  is surprisingly little known about the biology and role of the insecticidal
  parasporal body in nature. Although isolated from a wide variety of habitats,
  it does not grow well in many because it is not a major or dominant species.
  Unlike many viruses, fungi and protozoa, B.
  thuringiensis has never been
  reported in large-scale epizootics. B.
  thuringiensis is quite
  commonly isolated from grain dust, and the original description by Berliner
  (1915) was based on an isolate from the Mediterranean flour moth, Anagasta kuehniella (Zeller). The cadavers of insects killed by B. thuringiensis provide very suitable substrates for
  reproduction and sporulation (Aly et al. 1985). Therefore, the bacteria,
  which harbor plasmids encoding insecticidal bacterial proteins, have a
  selective advantage when the spores and parasporal bodies occur together, and
  the number of parasporal bodies ingested by an insect is sufficient to cause
  death. The parasporal
  crystals of the isolates of the three pathotypes as described by Krieg et al.
  (1983), are very different. The crystals of pathotype A, active against
  lepidopterous larvae, are usually bipyramidal. The crystal is made up of
  230-kDa dimers (Holmes & Monro 1965) which, in the reducing high pH
  environment of a susceptible insect's midgut, are dissociated into protoxin,
  whose size is in the vicinity of 135 kDa apparent molecular weight, which is
  not toxic until it is enzymatically digested by midgut proteinases into the
  active fragment. The reported sizes of the active fragment range from 500 Da
  to 708 kDa. Faust & Bulla 91982) have summarized the treatment
  conditions, methods of separation, and results of the many reports.
  Chestukhina et al (1978) found that B.
  thuringiensis crystals were contaminated,
  either on their surface or within the crystal lattice, with proteinases that
  could digest the crystal protein, especially when dissociated. This explains
  why Bulla et al. (1979) found an active fragment of 68 kDa, not 135-kDa
  protoxin, when an alkali-dissociated crystal solution was incubated for 6
  days at 28°C. When Zalunin et al. (1979) and Chestukhina et al. (1980) took
  steps to inactivate the contaminating proteinases, their data on the
  dissociation of B. thuringiensis crystals were
  much more consistent. Yamamoto & Iizuka (1983) investigated the
  activation process for the toxin under controlled conditions similar to that
  in the midgut of T. ni larvae. They found that the
  135-kDa crystal protoxin, prepared by dissociating the crystal in a reducing
  alkaline environment, was rapidly digested by T. ni gut
  proteinases until the protein reached a 62-kDa proteinase-resistant core
  which retained 100% activity. The B. thuringiensis pathotype A crystal often contains
  additional cuboidal or round crystals within them (Beegle & Yamamoto
  1992). Grigorova & Kalucheva (1966) described bipyramidal crystals of
  subsp. thuringiensis with
  ovoid bodies embedded in the sides of the crystal matrix. Sharpe & Baker
  (1979) observed similar embedded bodies in subsp. kurstaki crystals that appeared to be both cuboidal and
  round. Yamamoto & McLaughlin (1981) isolated from a commercial kurstaki strain a 65-kDa
  protein which was immunologically and biochemically distinguishable from the
  135-kDa protein. They termed the protein P2 and found that it was toxic to
  both lepidopterous and dipterous larvae. Iizuka & Yamamoto (1983) then
  speculated that the embedded bodies were composed of the P2 protein. Pathotype B
  consisting of subsp. israelensis
  and a dipterous active subsp. morrisoni
  isolate (PG-14), are highly active against mosquito and blackfly larvae.
  Several irregularly shaped crystals per sporangium are produced at
  sporulation. The crystals consist of three groups of proteins, 128-135 kDa,
  72-78 kDa, and 27 kDa. The 27-kDa protein is unique in that it is cytotoxic
  to mammalian cells, and although it has little or no insecticidal activity,
  it may have synergistic action with the 72- to 78- and 128- to 135-kDa toxin
  proteins (Wu & Chang 1985). Pathotype C,
  active against coleopterous larvae, consists of subsp. tenebrionis. The crystal is unique, both in shape and
  protein characteristics. It is square and flat, and is composed of 67-kDa
  protein molecules (McPherson et al. 1988). Unlike any other B. thuringiensis subspecies, subsp. tenebrionis crystals dissolve in NaBr solutions and in
  denaturing agents in the absence of reducing agents, suggesting that
  disulfide bonds are not present (Bernhard 1986). Another unusual aspect is
  that NaBr- or alkali-dissolved crystals recrystallize into flat squares when
  NaBr is removed or the pH is lowered. Beegle &
  Yamamoto (1992) noted that years ago host spectral differences were known
  with B. thuringiensis (Burgerjon & Grison 1959). It was
  thought that such differences in activity spectra of some isolates might have
  taxonomic value and possibly could be used in classification (Burgerjon &
  Biache 1967). Some specialists believed that the crystal toxin with differing
  host spectra were the same, thus the use of the singular term "the delta-endotoxin,"
  and that the spectral differences were due to differences in crystal
  digestibilities. This belief was based n the report of Lecadet &
  Martouret (1964) that there was a direct relationship between the speed of
  enzymatic hydrolysis of B. thuringiensis crystals in gut
  juice of Pieris brassicae L. and their
  toxicity, and that when the crystals of a less effective subspecies reached
  the same degree of dissolution as those of a more effective subspecies, they
  were equally toxic. The report of Aronson et al. (1991) confirmed that there
  can be a relationship between toxicity of intact crystals and their
  digestibility. They found that when the cryA(b)
  gene was lost by a subsp. aizawai
  isolate, its crystals were less soluble and less toxic to highly susceptible
  insects such as Manduca sexta (L.) and T. ni, but solubilized protoxins from those crystals were
  still fully active. But those effects were not observed with subsp. kurstaki crystals or with the
  much less susceptible species Spodoptera
  frugiperda J.E. Smith).
  Also, Haider et al. (1986) found that the host spectrum of a subsp. aizawai isolate was determined
  by differential proteolytic processing of the protoxin. When the subsp. aizawai solubilized protoxin
  was activated by P. brassicae gut extracts, the
  resulting active fragments were active against three dipterous cell lines and
  only one lepidopterous (S. frugiperda) cell line. When the
  protoxin was activated by A.
  aegypti gut extracts, the
  active fragments were active only against the four lepidopterous cell lines. The contention
  that host spectra were determined only by crystal digestibility was probably
  the basis of Monsanto's expectations in their early project involving B. thuringiensis. In 1983 Monsanto announced that they had
  successfully incorporated the subsp. kurstaki
  crystal toxin gene into corn root-colonizing Pseudomonas fluorescens
  (Trevisan), which then produced the soluble toxin (active fragment). Their
  expectation was that Diabrotica
  spp. and Agrotis ipsilon (Hufnagel) larvae feeding
  on corn plants would be killed because they would be ingesting the soluble
  toxin. This did not occur at any level that was significantly effective
  against those insects. It became widely accepted that there is a receptor
  binding domain in the activated toxin that determines the specificity of the
  toxin, and that active fragments with different activity spectra differ in
  their receptor domains (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). It was believed
  for quite sometime that the activity of B.
  thuringiensis spore crystal
  complexes toward insect larvae was due entirely to the crystal toxins. Some
  insects as B. mori (Angus 1954), Ephestia cautella (Walker) (McGaughey 1978), Simulium vittatum
  Zetterstedt (Lacey et al. 1978), and L.
  decemlineata (Riethmuller
  & Langenbruch 1989) seem susceptible only to the crystal toxin, the spore
  having no effect. Other insects such as Colias
  eurytheme Boisduval, T. ni, Pseudaletia
  unipunctata (Haworth)
  (Somerville et al. 1970), Pieris
  rapae (L.) (Soliman et al.
  1970), Plodia interpunctella Hübner)
  (McGaughey 1978), Laspeyresia
  pomonella (L.) (Roehrich 1962; Vervelle 1975), O. nubilalis
  (Mohd-Salleh & Lewis 1982, Sutter & Raun 1966), G. mellonella
  (Burges) et al. 1976), Li et al. 1987), and S. exigua
  (Moar et al. 1989) are maximally sensitive to mixtures of spores and crystals. In O. nubilalis, the response to B. thuringiensis
  spores and crystals is isolate dependent. Modh-Salleh & Lewis (1982)
  found that subsp. galleriae
  and kurstaki mixtures of spores
  and crystals were significantly more toxic than crystals alone; but with
  subsp. kenyae and tolworthi, mixtures of spores
  and crystals were not significantly more toxic than crystals alone. In Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens) some
  controversy exists as to the relative importance of B. thuringiensis
  spores and crystals. Yamvrias & Angus (1970) and Smirnoff & Valero
  (1979) both found that mixtures of spores and crystals were the most toxic to
  C. fumiferana larvae. Fast (1977) though concluded that spores
  played little or no role in mortality of spruce budworm larvae by B. thuringiensis. Fast's data show that the LC-50s of
  crystals alone and spore crystal mixtures were nearly identical, whereas the
  LC-95 of the spore-crystal mixture was nearly half that of the LC-95 of
  crystals alone. It is not known whether the increases in activity that result
  when spores are present is due to the additional crystal protein present in
  the spore coat (Delafield et al. 1968, Somerville et al. 1968, Somerville et
  al. 1970, Somerville & Pockett 1974, 1975; Sutter & Raun 1967,
  Lecadet et al. 1972, Scherre & Somerville 1977, Short et al. 1974, Tyrell
  et al. 1981, Li et al. 1987), or to another factor such as infection by the
  resulting vegetative cells. Two findings arguing against the former are
  Burges et al. (1976) who found that a 1:1 mixture of spores and crystals of
  subsp. galleriae was about
  10,000-fold more toxic to G.
  mellonella larvae than were
  crystals alone; Li et al. (1987) reported that spores of an acrystalliferous
  mutant of subsp. aizawai did
  not contain any crystal protein and did not cause any significant mortality
  when fed alone to G. mellonella larvae. However,
  when the acrystalliferous spores were mixed 1:1 with subsp. aizawai crystals, the activity
  was about 200-fold higher than for crystals alone. Reports that antibiotics
  decrease B. thuringiensis activity when fed
  with spore-crystal complexes to insect larvae (Affify & Merdan 1969,
  Soliman et al. 1970, Somerville et al. 1970, Ignoffo et al. 1977a,b; Beegle et
  al. 1981, Li et al. 1987) suggest that the enhancement of activity by spore
  presence is due to a biological rather than a toxin factor. The degree to
  which spores play a role in the pathology of B. thuringiensis
  in any particular insect is probably determined by whether the insect in
  question is a Type 1, 2, or 3 insect as per Heimpel & Angus (1959), which
  may itself be influenced by larval age (Beegle et al. 1981). The need for
  spore presence for maximum B.
  thuringiensis activity with
  some pest insects may be a limiting factor where plants have been engineered
  to produce B. thuringiensis crystal toxin or
  with products such as Mycogen's M-CAP which does not contain spores (Beegle
  & Yamamoto 1992). A cherished
  attribute of B. thuringiensis was the absence of
  resistance in target pests to bacteria/spore-crystal complexes for >25 yrs
  of commercial use. However in the early 1980s differences appeared in
  susceptibility to subsp. kurstaki
  spore-crystal complexes in populations of P.
  interpunctella in different
  storage bins (see Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Susceptibility decreased
  almost 30 times after two generations of spore-crystal exposure and 100X
  after 15 generations of exposure. McGaughey (1985) found that B. thuringiensis resistance was inherited as a recessive
  trait, and was stable after selection was discontinued. Soon thereafter,
  resistance was found in populations of Cadra
  cautella (Walker) (McGaughey
  & Beeman 1988), H. virescens (Stone et al. 1989),
  and Plutella xylostella (L.) (Tabashnik et al. 1990). In H. virescens, resistance developed
  to a genetically engineered P.
  fluorescens containing a
  130-kDa subsp. kurstaki
  protoxin. Van Rie et al. (1990) and Ferre et al. (1991) showed that resistance of P. interpunctella and P.
  xylostella, respectively,
  was correlated with a reduction in affinity of the midgut epithelium membrane
  receptors for crystal toxin proteins. This offers not only an explanation for
  the mechanism of development of resistance, but also the mode of action of
  the crystal toxins (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Heat-tolerant Exotoxins
  (Beta-Exotoxins).--These
  exotoxins were discovered by McConnell & Richards (1959), being known as
  Beta-exotoxin, fly factor, heat-stable toxin, thermostable toxin and
  thuringiensin. The thuringiensin in the literature is produced by vegetative
  cells during growth and is a water-soluble, dialyzable nucleotide composed of
  adenine, ribose, glucose, and allaric acid with a phosphate group (Farkas et
  al. 1969). The use of "stable" is somewhat misleading because the
  heat-tolerant exotoxin activity of some subspecies (e.g., tolworthi) degrades slowly with
  autoclaving, but others (e.g., thuringiensis)
  contains isolates that produce exotoxin whose activity is not reduced by
  autoclaving at 125°C for 30 min (Mohd-Salleh et al. 1980). It was believed
  that the heat-tolerant exotoxins produced by different subspecies of B. thuringiensis were identical. But studies by Mohd-Salleh
  et al. (1980) and Gingrich et al. (1922a, 1922b) revealed the existence of
  more than one species of heat-tolerant exotoxin. Levinson et al. (1990) chemically confirmed the existence of a second
  heat-tolerant exotoxin, which they called II Beta-exotoxin. They found the
  new exotoxin more specific than I Beta-exotoxin, and very active against L. decemlineata. The mode of
  action of type I Beta-exotoxin is inhibition of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase
  (Sebesta & Horska 1970), thus it has a very wide host range. Two
  Beta-exotoxin-containing products are produced and used in the former USSR,
  Turingin 1 and 2 (2 and 10% B-exotoxin, respectively) and Bitoxibacillin
  (0.6- 0.8% B-exotoxin) (Weiser 1986). The products are used effectively
  against several species of red mites, as well as the larvae of house flies
  and blow flies. Detectable levels of Beta-exotoxin are not allowed in B. thuringiensis products in Western Europe and North
  America. Abbott Laboratories developed the product D-Beta based on
  Beta-exotoxin, and has attempted to obtain registration. Various methods have
  been used to detect and quantify heat-tolerant exotoxins of B. thuringiensis, such as larval fly, bacterial, and
  biochemical assays. The method of choice by 1992 was high-performance liquid
  chromatography (HPLC) (Campbell et al. 1987) . Heat-labile Exotoxin
  (alpha-Exotoxin).--A heat-labile insecticidal exotoxin produced by B. thuringiensis was reported by Toumanoff (1954). It was
  found that a precipitated protein from subsp. alesti culture filtrates was toxic to G. mellonella
  larvae. Smirnoff (1964) found a heat-labile substance in Thuricide product filtrate
  (0.3 millimicrons) that was toxic to Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Diptera,
  Orthoptera and Hymenoptera. Krieg (1971a) observed that sterile filtered
  supernatants from subsp. alesti
  and galleriae broths were
  toxic per os to Plutella xylostella (L.) larvae. He
  found that the toxic substance was precipitated by two-thirds ammonium
  sulfate saturation, and that activity was destroyed by autoclaving and
  trypsin. Krieg (1971b) determined that the substance was not a lecithinase
  (also called phospholipase or more accurately phosphatidylcholine choline
  phosphohydrolase). Heimpel (1967) had coined the term alpha-exotoxin for the B. thuringiensis heat-labile exotoxin, and he assumed that it
  was lecithinase C. Ivinskiene (1978) conformed that alpha-exotoxin and lecithinase
  from B. thuringiensis were not the same. Krieg & Lysenko
  (1979) believed that alpha-exotoxin was only demonstrable by bioassay and
  that it could not be chemically isolated or purified. But Krieg (1986)
  estimated that the size of alpha-exotoxin was 45-50 kDa, as estimated by gel
  filtration. One of the deficiencies of the work with alpha-exotoxin is the
  failure to consider the extensive B.
  cereus toxin literature, as B. thuringiensis is similar, if not identical, to B. cereus except for an insecticidal crystal. Among the B. cereus toxins listed by Turnbull (1981) are several that
  are lethal to mice, a trait also of the B.
  thuringiensis
  alpha-exotoxin. The one that appears to be most like alpha-exotoxin is the
  "diarrheagenic" toxin, which as a size of ca. 50 kDa and a pI of
  4.85. Pathogenic Modes.--Although the spore may play a role in the pathogenicity of B. thuringiensis, the parasporal body causes the rapid
  paralysis and final death of insects (Aronson et al. 1986, Hofte &
  Whiteley 1989, Huber & Luthy 1981, Moar et al. 1989). In the subspecies kurstaki, the parasporal body
  dissolves after ingestion when coming into contact with the alkaline
  environment of the midgut (pH 8-10). Many of the toxins have been found to be
  actually protoxins of ca. 133 kDa (e.g., CryI, CryIVA, CryIVB) from which
  active toxins of 60-70 kDa are cleaved by proteases. The activated toxin
  molecules pass through the paratrophic membrane and bind to specific
  receptors on the microvilli of the midgut epithelium. Binding is an essential
  step in intoxication, and in susceptible insects the toxicity of a particular
  B. thuringiensis protein is correlated with the number of
  specific binding sites on microvilli and the affinity of the Bacillus molecules for these
  sites (Hoffmann et al. 1988, Van Rie et al. 1989, 1990). Nevertheless,
  binding alone does not always lead to toxicity, which suggests that insertion
  and probably some kind of processing in the midgut membrane is necessary to
  achieve toxicity (Wolfersberger 1990). The microvillii lose their typical
  structure within minutes of binding, the cells becoming vacuolated and they
  swell (Huber & Luthy 1981, Luthy & Eberrsold 1981). Swelling
  continues until the cells lyse and detach from the basement membrane of the
  midgut epithelium. Alkaline gut juices leak into the hemocoel as the cells
  are detached, which causes the hemolymph pH to rise by ca. 0.5, ending in the
  paralysis and death of the insect (Heimpel 1967, Heimpel & Angus 1963). The actual
  process of intoxication at the molecular level is as yet unknown, especially
  the events occurring after the toxin binds to the receptor. Evidence suggests
  an immediate influx of potassium and calcium, after which the cell takes in
  water to balance these cations. As an explanation of this cationic influx, it
  was proposed that B. thuringiensis molecules either
  act directly on a potassium pump (Wolfersberger 1989), or insert into the
  microvillar membrane forming transmembrane cation pores (Chilcott et al.
  1990, Knowles & Ellar 1987). Other evidence suggests that the Bacillus molecules may act
  inside the cell (Schwartz et al. 1991), so that the mode of action may be
  even more complex (Gill et al. 1991). Bacillus thuringiensis for Insect Control.--Previously discussed attributes of fast action, low cost and
  ease of mass production and deployment, and safety for nontarget organisms,
  have caused the production of many commercially available products based on
  different isolates and subspecies. The most successful isolate has been the
  HD 1 isolate of B. thuringiensis kurstaki, which is the active
  ingredient in many commercial types used to control larvae of Lepidoptera in
  varied habitats (Morris 1982). For mosquito and simulid control, a range of
  commercial products based on ONR 60A isolate of B. thuringiensis
  israelensis are available
  (Mulla 1990). The latter has been used by the World Health Organization for
  onchocerciasis control in West Africa (Guillet et al. 1990, Lacey &
  Undeen 1986). Also available are commercial products based on isolates of B. thuringiensis morrisoni
  for Coleoptera, specifically larvae and adults of the Colorado potato beetle,
  Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say). Production
  typically involves submerging cultures on protein rich corn steep media in
  large fermentation vats (Dulmage et al. 1990). A slurry is produced from
  fermentation, which contains sporulated, lysed cells, which are frequently
  spray dried before formulation. A less sophisticated method of production may
  simply involve bacteria grown on grain and grain hulls in open shallow trays. Formulations
  include dusts, wettable powders or emulsifiable concentrates that are applied
  as chemical insecticides. The dosage varies within the range of 250-500 grams
  per ha., of which only 25-30% consists of active proteins. Resistance to B. thuringiensis is a reality (McGaughey 1985, Tabashnik et
  al. 1990), and it is not known as of 1992 whether new strains might be able
  to keep ahead of the process as usage expands. Standardization of B.
  thuringiensis Products.--As previously discussed there were early problems with
  standardization of the killing power of B.
  thuringiensis-based products
  because of the unfortunate use of spore counts. There is no relationship
  between the number of spores in a preparation and its insect killing power,
  which is true for both lepidopterous (Dulmage & Rhodes 1971) and
  dipterous (Smith 1982) active isolates. Bonnefoi et al. (1958) published a
  description of a standardization procedure using insect bioassay and comparison
  of the resulting LC50s and LC50 of a concurrently bioassayed standard to
  correct for daily LC50 fluctuations. They also mentioned generating
  "biological units" as a measure of the potency of a preparation
  based on comparison with a standard. Menn (1960) first published a procedure
  in North America for bioassaying B.
  thuringiensis. Mechalas
  & Anderson (1964) of Nutrilite Products first advanced in North America
  the use of standard and potency ratios. Much of the basic bioassay
  methodology advanced by Mechalas while at Nutrilite is still sued in
  standardization. The first international effort came in 1964 at the
  International Symposium on the Identification and Assay of Viruses and Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner Used for Insect Control, held in
  London, England. Two notable resolutions adopted were (1) that spore count
  was not sufficient and (2) the recommendation that LC50s and standard
  preparations be used. The second B.
  thuringiensis standardization
  meeting was the 1966 Symposia on the Standardization of Insect Pathogens held
  in Wageningen, Netherlands. It was recommended that a preparation of B. thuringiensis subsp. thuringiensis
  produced by Institut Pasteur in Paris, be adopted as the international
  primary standard for the bioassay of B.
  thuringiensis preparations.
  The standard was assigned a potency of 1000 international units per
  milligram, and designated as E-61 (Burges et al. 1966). Many researchers
  contributed to solving the standardization problem, including Bonnefoi &
  Burgerjon of France, Krieg & Herfs of Germany, and Mechalas of Nutrilite
  Products and Fisher of IMC in the United States. But the one probably most
  responsible in Europe was Denis Burges of England and Art Heimpel in North
  America (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). There has been a
  number of B. thuringiensis standards developed sine E-61. E-61 is
  still viable and available from the Institut Pasteur, and was used in the
  standardization of both HD-1-S-1971 (Dulmage 1973) and HD-1-S-1980 (Beegle et
  al. 1986). The HD-1-S-1971 preparation was the U.S. kurstaki reference standard in use from 1971 to 1980. By
  1992 the U.S. kurstaki
  standard was HD-1-S-1980. it is used to determine potencies of
  lepidopterous-active B. thuringiensis-based products.
  Unfortunately, the publicly held supply of HD-1-S-1980, not at the USDA
  Northern Regional Res. Cent. in Peoria, IL. has lost about 2000 IU per
  milligram and thus is assaying about 14,000 IU per milligram (P. Martinat,
  1989, pers. commun. to C. Beegle & T. Yamamoto). The potency loss is
  either the result of improper storage at Weslaco, TX, or from being
  transported several times between 1986 and 1988. But, there are a number of
  laboratories where HD-1-S-1980 was received before 1986, has been stored
  properly and is fully active. Salama et al. (1989) developed a subsp. entomocidus-based
  standard, HD-635-S-1987, for use in bioassays against Spodoptera spp., as HD-1-S-1980 has only small activity
  against this genus. Another lepidopterous-active standard is CSBt5ab-87,
  subsp. galleriae, developed
  in the People's Republic of China (Beegle et al. 1991). There have been four
  subsp. israelensis-based
  standards developed for use in standardizing dipterous-active B. thuringiensis products. ÍPS-78 and IPS-80 lost potency in
  storage and were replaced by IPS-82, which has been stable; and the
  HD-968-S-1983 standard was lost, which leaves IPS-82 as the only subsp. israelensis-based standard
  available in 1992 (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Two lepidopteran
  and two dipteran standard bioassay techniques have been proposed.
  Additionally, two bioassay techniques have been described and compared for
  use in bioassaying subsp. tenebrionis-based
  products against coleopterous larvae (Riethmuller & Langenbruch 1989).
  The first lepidopteran bioassay, developed by a joint industry and U.S. Dept.
  Agriculture effort, was based on T.
  ni larvae as the bioassay
  insect and a diet-incorporation technique using semisynthetic diet (Dulmage
  et al. 1971). But this assay had two drawbacks; antibiotic was specified to
  be used in the semisynthetic diet, which can have variable effects depending
  on the age of the bioassayed larvae (Beegle et al. 1981), and the ability of
  a standard to correct for differences in assay methods was overestimated. Later
  it was found that the use of a standard does not in all cases correct for
  differences in assay techniques (Beetle 1990). Therefore, a new bioassay for
  determining potencies of lepidopterous-active B. thuringiensis
  preparations was developed jointly by the U.S. Dept. Agriculture and U.S. B. thuringiensis producers (Beegle et al. 1991). There are
  two standardized bioassays for mosquito-active preparations. The first is the
  World Health Organization 1981 bioassay with flexible protocols to allow for
  differing conditions and materials available in different parts of the world,
  and the second is the U.S. standard bioassay with specific protocols
  (McLaughlin et al. 1984). Bioassay of B. thuringiensis products is costly, time consuming, prone to
  problems. Therefore, it has been suggested that insect bioassays be replaced
  with chemical or in vitro assays. Winckler et al. (1971) published a description of an immunochemical technique
  to determine the amount of crystal protein and its relationship to
  insecticidal activity as determined by insect bioassay. The technique takes
  48 h and has a 98-107% agreement with insect bioassay, depending on the
  number of determinations and samples. Andrews et al. (1980) modified this
  technique to shorten the required time to 4 h. Smith & Ulrich (1983)
  developed a non-competitive ELISA technique for quantitative detection of B. thuringiensis crystal protein, which also takes 4 h and
  gives closer agreement with insect bioassay values than does rocket
  immunoelectrophoresis. Brussock & Currier (1990) reported on using
  SDS-PAGE to measure successfully the amount of crystal toxin protein in
  production samples. There are some important cautions to be aware of when
  considering using chemical assays to standardize B. thuringiensis
  products. The desired information is the killing power of the preparation
  toward target pests. The host spectrum of a preparation is determined by the
  type of crystal toxin present in the preparation, often differing by only a
  few amino acids in the N-terminal region of the active fragment from other
  crystal toxins with different host spectra. Isolates with multiple crystal
  toxin genes, such as the HD-1, can yield products with somewhat differing
  host spectra in different fermentation batches. The killing power of a preparation
  is determined by both the quality and quantity of crystal toxin present.
  Chemical methods only measure the quantity of toxin present and not its
  quality. All published chemical methods use crystal toxin produced, harvested
  and stored under certain often ideal conditions. In commercial production,
  very large batches are produced under varying conditions, different media,
  recovered by techniques such as spray drying and in the course of formulation
  can be ground or milled, some of which may damage the crystal protein.
  Possibly with the exception of work by Tyski (1989), chemical assays cannot
  reliably distinguish between undamaged and damaged crystal protein (Beegle
  & Yamamoto 1992). Also three are a number of pest insects that require
  the presence of spores for maximum toxin activity, as previously discussed.
  Chemical methods cannot measure the presence, number or viability of spores.
  Significantly, Abbott Laboratories, pioneers in the development of chemical
  assays of crystal toxin and the world's largest producer of B. thuringiensis products, still standardizes their
  preparations by insect bioassay. Biotechnology or Genetic Engineering.--Zakharyan et al. (1976) first reported the presence of
  plasmids in B. thuringiensis. Stahly et al.
  (1978) heat-shocked subsp. kurstaki
  spores and isolated a small number (0.5-1.0%) of Spo+ Cry- colonies that had
  lost all of their plasmids. This suggested involvement of the lsot plasmids
  in crystal formation. Gonzales et al. (1981) isolated a series of mutants from several different B. thuringiensis isolates, and demonstrated that production
  of crystal protein ceased when a large plasmid was lost. The presence or
  absence of crystal toxin activity in Cry+ and Cry- variants was confirmed by insect
  bioassay. Gonzalez et al. (1982) further reported that the plasmids bearing the crystal
  genes were transmissible to B.
  cereus, which then produced
  crystals. Schnepf &
  Whiteley (1981) cloned one of the subsp. kurstaki
  crystal toxin genes into the pES1 plasmid in Echerichia coli.
  The 130-kDa crystal protein was expressed as shown by a positive antibody
  reaction to crystal protein and toxicity to M. sexta
  larvae. Klier et al. (1982)
  cloned a crystal gene from a strain of subsp. thuringiensis. A large number of reports of the cloning of
  crystal toxin genes followed. Because crystal toxin proteins are highly
  homologous, a cloned crystal toxin gene can be used to find or probe other
  crystal toxin genes. Crystal toxin genes of the other two pathotypes also were
  cloned. Ward et al. (1984) first cloned one of the crystal toxin genes of
  subsp. israelensis
  (pathotype B), and three different groups published simultaneously reports of
  cloning the crystal toxin gene of subsp. tenebrionis
  (pathotype C) (Sekar et al. 1987, Hofte et al. 1987, Jahn et al. 1987). Li et al. (1991)
  reported on the structure of subsp. tenebrionis
  toxin called CryIIIA worked out by David Ellar at the University of
  Cambridge. They used X-ray crystallography to resolve the structure of 2.5
  Ang. The CryIIIA toxin is made of 644 amino acid residues that are divided in
  three domains called Domain I, II, III. Domain I, an assembly of several
  alpha-helices, is thought to be involved in the membrane-spanning
  (poreforming) function. Domain II is considered to be the receptor binding
  domain and has repeating beta-sheet structures. Domain III is also rich in
  the beta-sheet structure, and is thought to protect the other domains from
  proteinase digestion. It is imperative to have the structural information when
  attempts are made to engineer a new toxin protein. The CryIIIA structure
  determined by Ellar's group clearly shows the orientation of each amino acid
  residue. This information makes it possible to determine the involvement of
  each amino acid residue in the insecticidal activity. Four research
  groups by 1987 reported success in obtaining the expression of B. thuringiensis crystal toxin in plants: Adang et al. 1987,
  Barton et al. 1987, Vaeck et al. 1987 in tobacco and Fischhoff et al. 1987 in
  tomato. Initially the level of expressed crystal toxin was very low, ca.
  10,000-fold less than that produced in native B. thuringiensis
  cells. These low levels (<0.001% of total soluble plant protein) were only
  effective against Manduca
  spp. larvae, which are extremely sensitive to the crystal toxin. Monsanto
  scientists raised the expression level of crystal toxin to 0.1% by modifying
  the nucleotide sequence of the structural subsp. kurstaki gene. The 0.1% level of crystal toxin was reportedly
  sufficient to control such economically important pests as Heliothis spp. larvae (Fuchs et
  al. 1990, Perlak et al. 1990). Other plants such as cotton, soybean and
  cabbage also have been transformed with B.
  thuringiensis crystal toxin
  genes. Several
  biotechnology companies attempting to create novel B. thuringiensis
  products, have produced some interesting genetic engineering results. Crop
  Genetics International placed the crylA(c) gene from a kurstaki isolate into Clavibacter
  xyli subsp. cynodontis Davis (Cxc), which
  is a fastidious, Gram-positive, coryneform bacterium that exists only in the
  xylem of Bermuda grass in nature (Dimock et al. 1988). Corn plants inoculated
  with Cxc containing the B. thuringiensis crystal toxin
  gene (Cxc/Bt) develop populations of up to 1 X 1010 Cxc/Bt cells
  per ml. xylem sap in the vascular system of the stem at the soil line. In
  vitro production of B. thuringiensis crystal toxin in
  Cxc/Bt is ca. 0.1% of cell protein; less is produced in the xylem of corn
  plants. Crop Genetics International estimated that ca. a 10-fold increase in
  toxin expression is necessary for satisfactory control of O. nubilalis larvae. If that is achieved they may market seed
  corn impregnated with Cxc/Bt (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Ecogen has
  constructed isolates containing new gene combinations using a natural
  conjugal plasmid exchange system which exists in B. thuringiensis
  (Carlton 1988). This has led to the products Condor and Foil. With Condor
  they selected a plasmid-cured isolate having ca. 2X the activity of HD-1, and
  mated it to another isolated containing a plasmid that coded for a crystal
  toxin having high activity toward gypsy moth larvae. This resulted in a
  transconjugant having ca. 7.5-fold higher activity than HD-1 against gypsy
  moth larvae. Because potato plants have both lepidopteran and coleoptran
  pests, and because there are no native B.
  thuringiensis isolates that
  possess spore-crystal complex activity against both groups, Ecogen developed
  a transconjugant isolate active against both lepidopteran and coleopteran
  larvae. They mated a coleopteran-active isolate found in Kansas soybean
  storage dust to a variant of a wild type subsp. kurstaki isolate having ca. 3X higher activity towards
  European corn borer larvae, which isolate is the basis of their product Foil
  (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Mycogen produced
  two biologically encapsulated products called MVP and M-Trak, active against
  lepidopteran and coleopteran pest larvae, respectively (Gelernter 1990). They
  transferred the lepidopteran- and coleopteran- active crystal toxin genes
  into a non-pathogenic strain of Pseudomonas
  fluorescens. The transformed
  P. fluorescens cells are grown in submerged culture, and
  after they have formed toxic crystal inclusion bodies within the cells, they
  are killed by heat and chemical treatments. The dead Pseudomonas cell walls are reported to be more rigid due
  to cross linking of the cell walls components, resulting in a protective
  microcapsule which encloses the respective crystals. The encapsulated
  products reportedly have about 2X the activity persistence on field crops
  compared with conventional products (Beegle & Yamamoto 1992). Relatively low
  levels of B. thuringiensis crystal toxin is
  produced in transformed organisms, especially plants, therefore quantification
  of the toxin is difficult. Monsanto found that the low toxin levels in
  transformed plants precluded the incorporation of a graded series of
  dilutions of homogenized plant parts into insect diet (Fuchs et al. 1990).
  Depending on the sensitivity of the test insect, it was found possible to
  obtain responses using detached leaf assays. Instead of using a graded series
  of dilutions (ca. 7) to obtain a dosage mortality response, they used larvae
  of seven different insect species which varied in their sensitivity to the
  crystal toxin to obtain a graded response. This technique enabled them to
  quantify toxin levels in transformed plant parts. Monsanto compared their
  leaf assay with ELISA and Western blot techniques, and found that the leaf
  assay was the most and Western blotting the least sensitive (Beegle &
  Yamamoto 1992). Transconjugate
  and genetically engineered strains with unique properties are approaching the
  market. He mentioned that Ecogen, Inc. of Langhorne, Pennsylvania combined
  two different plasmids (one encoding protein CryI toxic to Lepidoptera,
  another, CryIII, toxic to Coleoptera, into a single bacterial strain. The
  transconjugate strain has an expanded host range including both orders of
  insects. Also, Mycogen Corp. of San Diego, Calif., received registration for
  the first genetically engineered bacterial insecticide, MVP, a killed strain
  of Pseudomonas fluorescens that contains a B. thuringiensis toxin active against Lepidoptera (Feitelson
  et al. 1990). This strain shows greater residual activity in the field,
  obtained by fixing the Pseudomonas
  cell wall around the Bacillus
  protein.  Because B. thuringiensis genes may be manipulated easily using
  recombinant DNA technology, probably a variety of different approaches to
  controlling insects based on insecticidal proteins will develop. An example
  is the fusion proteins with an expanded host range that were made by fusing
  two B. thuringiensis genes (Honee et al. 1990). Also, some rather
  controversial developments include the successful engineering of B. thuringiensis genes into plants such as cotton, tomato,
  tobacco, potato, walnut, etc. (Fischhoff et al. 1987, Gould 1988a,b; Perlak
  et al. 1990, Vaeck et al. 1987). In these only a single B. thuringiensis
  gene was transformed into the plant species, and Stone et al. 1989) pointed
  out that single genes are prone to develop resistance rapidly. This work was
  controversial principally from the standpoint of the high risk that the
  release of such plants would pose for resistance development in both
  conventional and engineered products, which are applied as microbial
  insecticides. Although there is no direct evidence that transgenic plants are
  unsafe for human consumption, the question of their safety was raised (Goldburg
  & Tjaden 1990).  Beta-exotoxin.--Many isolates of B.
  thuringiensis secrete a
  thermostable exotoxin during vegetative growth, named variously as
  Beta-exotoxin, Thuringiensin or "fly factor." This toxin is an
  unusual nucleotide which acts as a competitive inhibitor of messenger RNA
  polymerase (see Lecadet & DeBarjac 1981, Sebesta et al. 1981). The
  beta-exotoxin is a teratogen, causing abnormal development and death in many
  different insects. It is also harmful in high concentrations on mammals and
  other vertebrates, and thus has not been registered in the United States.
  However, in Finland and parts of Africa it is allowed in formulations for
  control of filth breeding flies and in the former Soviet Union for the
  Colorado potato beetle. Beegle &
  Yamamoto (1992) concluded that in 90 years B. thuringiensis
  has gone from a laboratory curiosity to by far the most successful microbial
  pest control agent. It is the basis of the vast majority of biotechnology
  efforts with insect pathogens. This progress has resulted from numerous
  researchers efforts. Because of the attention that geneticists, biochemists
  and protein chemists have given go B.
  thuringiensis, enormous
  progress has been made in the toxin's genetics, identity and mode of action.
  They speculated that we may be close to realizing the dream of designing B. thuringiensis crystal toxins that will be effective
  against pest insects which historically have been unaffected by the
  spore-crystal complexes. Other Bacteria Species Isolate 2362 of B. sphaericus Neide was being developed in 1992 for control
  of mosquito larvae and the path+ isolate of Serratia entomophila,
  a non-sporeformer for control of the grass grub, Costelytra zealandica,
  a scarab pest in New Zealand. Similar to B.
  thuringiensis, B. sphaericus produces a protein toxin that kills larvae by
  cytolysis of the midgut epithelium (see Baumann et al. 1991, Davidson &
  Younsten 1990, Singer 1990). The genes encoding the toxin have been cloned
  and sequenced, and analyses suggest that the toxin is not related to any of
  those known from B. thuringiensis (Baumann et al.
  1988). The strain of S. entomophila under study causes
  and infectious disease in scarabs, entering the larva through the gut and
  colonizing the hemolymph, causing death. However, unlike B. popilliae,
  S. entomophila is easily mass cultured on artificial media. Generalizations.--A large group of organisms belonging to the Phycomytes,
  Oomycetes, Zygomycetes and Imperfect fungi cause diseases of insects and can
  reduce their numbers. Many are easily cultured and several are in use for
  biological control. Among the
  Phycomycetes the fungus Myiophagus
  ucrainicus plays an
  important role in natural control of citrus mites and scales in humid
  tropical regions and plantations with overhead sprinkling. The yellowish
  infected scales are located on the sides of leaf veins. During rain, the
  sporangia burst open and release flagellate zoospores which infect new
  scales. This process was used for the artificial spread of the fungus when
  branches with infected scales were brought into uninfected plantations and
  attached to the tops of trees. During rainy periods and under sprinklers, the
  zoospores invade the new habitat.  The
  Entomophthoraceae belonging to the Zygomycetes often cause large epizootics
  among insects of one species over a broad area of several thousand hectares.
  This is the case with Noctuids or grasshoppers or in many forest pests. The
  fungi can be isolated on coagulated egg yolk from fresh infected insects where
  conidia are spread around the infected animal. Old contaminated insects are
  not good for such isolation. The isolated fungi can be maintained on
  artificial media and even mass-produced in fermentors, but the application of
  the fungus is difficult due to low infectivity of such isolates. Entomophthora virulenta isolated in this way
  was distributed in cultures in plastic cups inverted over alfalfa in
  California thereby infecting aphids in this crop. Infected grasshoppers,
  caterpillars and houseflies with the fungus were released and infections were
  initiated in dense host populations. This is also the case in Strongwellsea castrans infecting the beet
  fly. Adults with apparent infection have an opening in the abdomen wherefrom
  conidia are dusted about during mating and flight. The most
  developed of microbial insecticides involve the fungi imperfecti. These fungi
  grow well on artificial media and can be mass produced for field application.
  In deep fermentation on liquid media short hyphal cells, the blastospores,
  are formed. These are less resistant, and survive only 3-4 months when
  properly stored. The airborne conidia are produced only on stagnant media
  such as sterilized plant materials such as cooked grain, rice and potatoes,
  or liquid artificial media. This production is adaptable for local or cottage
  production. A transient method between large scale and cottage type is the
  production in plastic bags on rice or on liquid medium. With some
  modifications all deuteromycetes can be produced in this way in rather large
  quantities (Weiser 1984). Beauveria bassiana,
  the white muscardine fungus, is an insect pathogen with a broad host range.
  It kills adult houseflies, different beetle grubs and adults. Examples are
  the Colorado potato beetle, snout beetles on roots of strawberries or
  seedlings, different scale insects and white flies. The fungus is not
  commercially produced , but cottage production is available. In the
  greenhouse optimum temperatures of 20-25°C and a high RH for the period after
  application should be guaranteed. Use of these fungi in the field is more
  complicated due to low RH. Verticillium
  is useful in dense cultures during a rainy period. Applications of
  insecticides with or independently of the fungi are possible. Fungicides may
  reduce the speed of action, but with the exception of Captan, Clorothalonin,
  imazalil, maneb and thiram, they can be used independently or in treatments
  postponed for five days. Other imperfect
  fungi such as Metarhizium anisopliae, the green
  muscardine fungus or Paecilomyces
  farinosus, and the rosy
  muscardine fungus have an overlapping range of hosts with Beauveria. They are produced
  under local conditions on plant materials, such as grains and rice, on traces
  or in plastic bags inoculated with sterile conidia. Harvesting after 14 days
  yields conidia together with remains of the nutrient and conidia that are
  washed off with water or collected with an exhaust apparatus. The temperature
  range of Metarhizium is
  lower than Beauveria
  (15-20°C) and the range of Paecilomyces
  drops to 12-18°C. Both are typical soil inhabiting fungi. The low temperature
  activity range of Paecilomyces
  is useful in its main habitat, the soil of coniferous forests where it
  infects hibernating insect larvae (Weiser 1984). Nemourea rileyi is a common fungus infecting noctuids in alfalfa fields and
  other crops in America. It is developed there as a microbial insecticide.
  Another fungus, Hirsutella thompsoni is used for control
  of mites under the trade mark Mycar. It has a short shelf life but is a
  rather efficient acaricide. The produce is on the market only as an
  experimental formulation pending improvement of storage. Fungi comprise a
  large group of eucaryotes that are distinguished by the presence of a cell wall, as in plants, but lacking
  in chloroplasts. They live either as saprophytes
  or parasites of plants and
  animals, requiring organic food for growth that was obtained by absorption
  from the substrate. The vegetative phase is known as a thallus and can be either
  unicellular, as in yeasts, or multicellular and filamentous, forming a
  mycelium, the latter being characteristic for most of the fungi attacking
  insects. During vegetative growth the mycelium consists primarily of hyphae,
  which may be either septate or
  non-septate, which grow throughout
  the substrate in a quest for nutrients. Reproduction may be either sexual or asexual, during which phase the mycelium produces specialized
  structures such as motile spores, sporangia and conidia which are usually the
  agents by which infection occurs. Fungi are best adapted to wet or moist
  habitats, and are usually easily cultured on artificial media.  There are five
  major subdivisions of fungi, reflecting the evolution of the biology of fungi
  from aquatic to terrestrial habitats.  Salient Biological
  Properties.--Fungi usually
  infect insects by active penetration through the cuticle, which makes them
  attractive for control of insects with sucking mouthparts. Typically the life
  cycle begins when a spore, either motile or a conidium, alights on the
  cuticle. Spores usually germinate quickly, producing a germ tube that grows
  and penetrates the cuticle, entering the hemocoel (St. Leger 1992). Hyphal
  bodies bud from the penetrant hyphae and either continue to grow and divide
  in a yeast-like way or elongate, forming hyphae that grow throughout the
  insect. Complete colonization of the body usually requires 7-10 days, after
  which the insect dies. Some fungi produce peptide toxins during vegetative
  growth, and in these strains death may occur within 48 hrs. If conditions are
  favorable, the mycelium forms reproductive structures and spores, thereby
  completing the life cycle. These may be produced either internally or
  externally, and can be motile spores, resistant spores, sporangia or conidia,
  according to the species. For microbial control, the ability of fungi to
  infect insects through the cuticle gives them advantage over viruses,
  bacterial and protozoa. Effective development would make them useful against
  the wide range of important insect pests with sucking mouthparts such as
  whiteflies, leafhoppers, scale insects and aphids. Detailed Characteristics.--Fungi are common pathogens which cause insect diseases in
  the field, and outbreaks of fungal diseases under favorable conditions often
  lead to spectacular epizootics that reduce populations of specific insects
  over large areas (Andreadis & Weseloh 1990, Carruthers & Soper 1987).
  Therefore, there has been great interest in using fungi to control insects
  for over a century, with the first efforts deploying Metarhizium anisopliae
  (Metchnikoff) for wheat cockchafer, Anisoplia
  austriaca Hubst. control. in
  Russia (Krassilstschik 1888, Steinhaus 1949). Numerous attempts since then to
  develop fungi as microbial insecticides have, however, not been very
  successful. There are presently (1992) no commercially available fungal
  insecticides in industrialized countries. But, fungi imperfecti such as M. anisopliae and Beauveria
  bassiana (Balsamo) are
  produced and used in several developing areas of the world. A "cottage
  industry" in Brazil and China and a semi commercial product
  "Boverin" in the former Soviet Union are present. Efforts to find
  alternatives to chemical insecticides have intensified research on fungi,
  which could lead to the successful use of fungi as both classical biological
  control agents and microbial insecticides. (Please refer to the following for
  additional information on fungi: Ferron 1978, Hall & Papierok 1982, McCoy
  1990, McCoy et al. 1988 Several examples
  to illustrate the advantages and disadvantages of this group of organisms as
  biological control agents as follows: Aquatic
  Fungi.--Coelomomyces & Lagenidium.--The genus Coelomomyces
  comprises >70 species of obligately parasitic fungi with complex life cycles
  involving alternation of sexual (gametophytic) and asexual (sporophytic)
  generations (Couch & Bland 2985, Whisler 1985). The sexual phase
  parasitizes a microcrustacean host, typically a copepod, while the asexual
  generation develops, with rare exception, in mosquito larvae. A biflagellate
  zygospore invades the hemocoel of a mosquito larva where it produces a
  sporophyte that colonizes the body, forming resistant sporangia. The larva
  dies and subsequently the sporangia undergo meiosis, producing uniflagellate
  meiospores that invade the hemocoel of a copepod host, where a gametophyte
  develops. At maturation the gametophyte cleaves, forming thousands of
  uniflagellate gametes. Cleavage results in death of the copepod and escape of
  the gametes that fuse, forming biflagellate zygospores that seek out another
  mosquito host, completing the life cycle. The life cycles of these fungi are
  highly adapted to those of their hosts, and as obligate parasites they are
  very fastidious in their nutritional requirements, so that no species of Coelomomyces has been cultured in vitro.  Coelomomyces
  is the largest genus of insect parasitic fungi, being reported from numerous
  mosquito species many of which are vectors of malaria and filariasis. In some
  species epizootics caused by Coelomomyces
  may kill >95% of the mosquito larval population (Chapman 1985, Couch &
  Umphlett 1963).  Considerable
  interest developed in Lagenidium
  giganteum, an oomycete
  fungus with two important advantages over Coelomomyces:
  ease of culture on artificial media and no need for an alternate host
  (Federici 1981). In the life cycle, a motile zoospore invades a mosquito
  larva through the cuticle; and once within the hemocoel, the fungus colonizes
  the body ind 2-3 days, producing an extensive mycelium consisting mainly of
  non-septate hyphae. Near the end of growth, the hyphae do become septate, and
  out of each segment an exit tube forms which grows back out through the
  cuticle, forming zoosporangia at the tip. Zoospores quickly differentiate in
  these, exiting through an apical pore to seek out a new substrate. Also,
  thick walled resistant sexual oospores may be formed within the mosquito
  cadaver.  Both
  zoosporangia and oospores may be produced in
  vitro. But field trials in
  California and North Carolina have revealed that the zoosporangia are too
  fragile for routine use in practical control. However, the oospore is quite
  stable even though germination is unpredictable. Field tests show that
  germination of even a small percentage of oospores can result in epizootics,
  leading to season-wide mosquito control (Kerwin & Washino 1987). Lagenidium remains a promising
  candidate for successful commercial development. Because oospores can
  overwinter, less frequent applications my be necessary in subsequent years.  The aquatic
  hyphomycete fungi, Culicinomyces
  clavosporus Couch and Tolypocladium cylindrosporum have also been
  considered for use in mosquito control (Federici 1981, Soares & Pinnock
  1984). At present high production costs and unclear control results in the
  field have curtailed their use. Terrestrial Fungi.--Terrestrial
  fungi have received the most attention in biological control, with most
  emphasis being placed on species of hyphomycetes such as M. anisopliae
  and B. bassiana. Also, the more specific and nutritionally
  fastidious entomophthoraceous fungi continue to receive attention, but rather
  for their potential use as classical biological controls than as microbial
  insecticides.  Entomophthorales.--This is a large order of zygomycete fungi containing numerous
  genera, many species of which are found parasitizing insects and other
  arthropods. They routinely cause localized and in some cases widespread
  epizootics in populations of Hemiptera and Homoptera, particularly aphids and
  leafhoppers, but also in grasshoppers and caterpillars. A few species of the
  genus Conidiobolus cause
  mycoses in some mammals, including humans (Humber 1989, Humber et al. 1989).
  However, most of the entomophthoraceous fungi are highly specific, obligate
  parasites of insects and therefore pose no threat for non-target organisms.
  Complex nutritional requirements have made culture in vitro
  impossible, and these fungi are highly host specific. The conidia are
  fragile, and the resistant spores, such as the oospores of Lagenidium are not easily
  germinated. By providing an optimum habitat for the natural occurrence of
  these fungi, they may be used in integrated control. There is also promise
  from exotic strains and species, for classical biological control. Infection and
  host colonization by the Entomophthorales is similar to that for other fungi,
  even though the types of reproductive structures formed and the specific
  details of life cycles differ (MacLeod 1963). If environmental conditions are
  favorable after infection (e.g., high RH), the mycelia generate
  conidiospores, typically growing ut of the insect cadavers and form fragile primary conidia at their tips. Such
  conidia are discharged in order to settle on another insect, and form a
  distinctive halo of conidia on
  the substrate around a dead insect. This is an effective method of
  dissemination where insects live in groups or develop high population
  densities. A secondary
  conidium may be generated if the primary conidium fails to locate a suitable
  substrate, repeating the process. This can continue for several times or
  until the conidial nutrient reserves are depleted. There can also be formed
  within the insect, thick-walled resistant sexual zygospores and asexual azygospores,
  both capable of surviving in the dead insect or in soils, germinating years
  later. Common genera
  found attacking insects are Entomophthora
  on flies and aphids, Conidiobolus
  on aphids, Erynia on aphids,
  Zoophthora on beetles,
  aphids and caterpillars and Entomophaga
  on caterpillars and grasshoppers. However, Wilding (1981) considered that
  none of these fungi offered much promise for commercial development.
  Classical biological control with these fungi may offer more consideration,
  as for example the introduction of Erynia
  radicans from Israel to
  Australia to control the spotted alfalfa aphid, Therioaphis maculata
  (Buckton), has resulted in a permanent population drop (Milner et al. 1982).
  A cultural modification enhanced control of alfalfa weevil, Hypera postica (Gyllenhal), where the first cutting of alfalfa
  was moved forward in the growing season in order to concentrate hosts under
  windrows when the air was warm and humid (Brown & Nordin 1982). Voronina
  (1971) distinguished zones based on moisture and temperature, which led to
  the development of a model that predicted epizootics by Entomophthora spp. in populations of the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum (Harris). Like most
  integrated control, success depends on a thorough knowledge of ecology and
  epizootiology. Hyphomycete Fungi.--These fungi belong to the subdivision Deuteromycotina
  (Fungi Imperfecti), which was designated to include fungi for which the
  sexual phase, or perfect state, is unknown. The group contains the species
  that are considered to have the highest potential for development as
  microbial insecticides, such as Beauveria
  bassiana and Metarhizium anisopliae, causing,
  respectively, the white and green muscardine diseases of insects. These
  species have a broader host range and are thought capable of infecting most
  orders of insects. Therefore, there is concern about the safety to non-target
  organisms, such as parasitoids and predators, although natural occurrence in
  these groups is rare. Workers working in mass culture of these fungi often
  develop allergic reactions to the conidia. Life cycles are
  similar to that described previously for other fungi (Roberts & Humber
  1981). During invasion and colonization, some species also produce peptide
  toxins that hasten the death of the host. The conidium is the infectious
  stage, and the taxonomy for Hyphomycetes is based mainly on the morphology of
  the reproductive structures, in particular conidiophores and conidia (Samson
  1981). Most species under commercial development are easily grown on a
  variety of artificial media. Generally, B.
  bassiana and M. anisopliae are being used against insects in cooler and
  humid climates, such as beetle larvae in soil and planthoppers in rice.
  Several other species with narrower host ranges are considered potential
  useful, including Paecilomyces
  fumoso-rosea for whiteflies, Verticillium
  lecanii for aphids and
  whiteflies indoors, Nomurea rileyi for noctuid larvae, and Hirsutella thompsonii for Acarina. There are several reasons for the
  current lack of availability of these fungi in industrialized countries. Steinernematids &
  Heterorhabitids Although different groups of nematodes are involved in the biological control of
  plant pests, in only two instances has a commercial system of production been
  developed. Nematodes of the group of Steinernematidae including the genera Steinernema (= Neoaplectana) and Heterorhabditis. The
  Steinernematidae are typical bacteria bearing nematodes that bring a specific
  bacterium within the host along with an invasive larva. When inside the
  host's body cavity, the larva releases the bacteria and grows to the adult
  using the bacteria as food. The first parasites are a giant female and male
  generation, while the next generation consists of normal males and females
  which produce larvae which in turn leave the host and crawl around seeking
  another host. The invaded host dies in 24-48 hrs. It is critical that the
  larvae do not dry out. This group having a wide host range, includes Steinernema kraussei, the most cold
  tolerant, attacking sawflies in forest soils and a group of former Neoaplectana: S. glaseri, S.
  carpocapsae, S. bibionis, etc. adapted to higher temperatures. They all
  attack Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, sawflies and Hemiptera. However, they do not enter
  fly maggots, the latter feeding rather on the nematodes. They are very
  efficient control factors of soil inhabiting stages of pests, especially of
  the Colorado potato beetle, different grubs and hibernating noctuids. Once
  found in a host, they can be cultivated on different caterpillars, usually on
  Galleria larvae. The
  invasive larvae are collected by washing the culture and are stored in bits
  of foam plastic in a water suspension. They are introduced with these
  substrates or washed out from the foam and sprayed in water over infected
  plants with pests during the early morning or late afternoon. Invasive larvae
  in foam plastic can be stored in closed containers with adequate moisture at
  4°C for >1-yr. Transportation in moist foam at temperatures over 25°C is
  not recommended. In the tropics, Heterorhabditis is the most
  adapted genus. It has a higher working temperature of 20-30°C, but does not
  survive long at 4°C. It has to be maintained at room temperatures. Insects
  infected by this nematode turn a brown color due to the activity of the
  bacterium symbiont, which participates also in some insecticidal activity.
  The nematode can be reared and produced in large quantities in the same way
  on caterpillars, and does not survive desiccation.  Nematodes are
  able to act independently of former insecticide applications, and are able to
  find their hosts by the sense of smell. They play important long lasting,
  self-regulating roles in plantations where they control the hosts in soil.
  Nematodes are safe for humans and vertebrates.  Nematodes are
  diverse but simple multicellular eucaryotes in the Phylum Nematoda, which are
  the roundworms. There is a lot of variation in biologies within the phylum.
  Many species are free-living, while others are either facultative or obligate
  parasites. Generally, nematodes are bilaterally symmetrical, elongate and
  vermiform, tapering at both ends, and covered by a cuticle that is molted
  during development. Most species have a stylet plus specialized feeding
  glands and an alimentary tract. Life stages include an egg, several juvenile
  stages (larvae) and adults. Adults may be sexually dimorphic as well as
  hermaphroditic. Species attacking insects vary in size from less than a
  millimeter in length to 30 centimeters!. Biological Characteristics.--The groups of nematodes which have been most thoroughly
  studied are the obligately parasitic mermithids (Family Mermithidae)
  attacking mosquitoes, the facultatively parasitic steinernematids (Family
  Steinernematidae) and heterorhabditids (Family Heterorhabditidae), which have
  been considered for control of insects in soil or within trees, and the
  facultatively parasitic neotylenchid nematodes (Family Neotylenchidae) of the
  genus Deladenus that have
  been developed for control of Sirex
  wood wasps. The facultative parasites appear to hold the most potential for
  biological control, which is due to the development of techniques for mass
  culture on artificial (please see Gaugler & Kaya 1990, Petersen 1982
  & Poinar 1979). Registration of nematodes as insecticides is not required
  by the Environmental Protection Agency. Mermithids.--These nematodes are among the largest attacking insects,
  adult females measuring from 5-20 cm. or more in length. The advanced stages
  of developing nematodes can often be seen within the host hemocoel where they
  appear as long, thin, white worms. Mermithids are obligately parasitic,
  having been reported from many orders of insects and from other arthropods
  such as crustaceans and spiders. Romanomermis
  culicivorax and R. iyengari are the only species that were seriously
  considered for biological control. These are capable of parasitizing many
  species of mosquito larvae (Petersen 1982).  The life cycle
  of R. culicivorax illustrates the biological control potential
  of these nematodes: Females are found in wet soil at the bottom of aquatic
  habitats in which mosquitoes breed. After mating, females lay thousands of
  eggs. The embryo develops into a first instar juvenile over ca. one week, and
  then molts to a second stage juvenile while still within the egg. The second,
  or preparasitic, stage hatches and swims to the surface of the water where it
  seeks out, and with the aid of the stylet, invades early instar mosquito
  larvae through the cuticle. The immature larva grows over a period of 7-10
  days within the hemocoel by absorbing nutrients through its cuticle, and
  molts once during this time. Upon completion of the parasitic phase, the
  third stage juvenile punctures its way out through the cuticle of the host,
  thereby killing the mosquito. It then descends to the bottom of the aquatic
  habitat where it matures without feeding over 7-10 days, and molts to the
  adult stage. Adults mate and the females lay eggs, completing the life cycle. Petersen (1982)
  and associates were able to mass culture R.
  culicivorax. In field
  studies, parasitism, and mortality, of anopheline larvae ranged as high as
  85% when pre-parasites were applied at a rate of 2,400/m2. Levy
  & Miller (1977) obtained higher levels of 96% parasitism when
  preparasites were applied at a rate of 3,600/m2 for control of floodwater
  mosquitoes in Florida. Romanomermis
  culicivorax is able to
  recycle, providing some level of control in subsequent generations of
  mosquitoes, but the level is usually not high enough to reduce the vector
  potential of mosquitoes or alleviate the annoyance problem. This nematode is
  very sensitive to chloride ions, and the methods developed for mass
  production, storage, shipment and use were not cost-effective, especially
  when compared to commercial formulations of B. thuringiensis
  israelensis. As was true
  with the furtherance of other organisms, such as planaria and hydra for
  mosquito control, B. thuringiensis apparently has
  halted efforts towards developing nematodes for biological control. It
  remains to be seen whether the development of resistance to Bacillus will follow the same
  route as with the chemical pesticides.  Steinernematids & Heterorhabitids.--Both are small (<1-3 mm) terrestrial nematodes occurring
  most often in nature as parasites of soil-inhabiting insects. They have
  simple and typical nematode life cycles that include an egg, four larval
  stages and the adult. This group of nematodes is distinguished by the fact
  that they have established a mutualistic relationship with bacteria that are
  harbored within their alimentary tracts. It is actually the bacteria that
  kill insects! The bacteria have evolved specific relationships with
  individual species of nematodes, as in the bacterial species Xenorhabdis nematophilis (Thomas &
  Poinar). This bacterium is associated with the steinermatid, Steinernema carpocapsae whereas X. luminescens is associated with the heterorabditid, Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. These nematodes
  also produce an unusual quasi-resistant larval stage, or dauer larva, the insect-infective stage,
  which is actually the 3rd instar juvenile surrounded by the molted cuticle of
  the 2nd stage. The dauer larva finds and infects the insect through the
  mouth, anus or the spiracles. Within the hemocoel the nematode feeds on
  hemolymph and defecates, releasing symbiotic bacteria. The latter colonize
  the insect, with death occurring 1-3 days later. The nematodes feed on the
  bacteria and tissues of the dead larva, mature and undergo 2-3 generations
  within the dead insect over a period of 1-2 weeks. Thousands of dauer larvae
  are produced, which leave the dead insect in search of new hosts. The experimental
  insect host range of these nematodes is broad, including >200 species of
  Coleoptera, Lepidoptera and Orthoptera. However, they do not survive well in
  dry or unprotected environments. Best results are obtained against beetle
  grubs or caterpillars in cryptic habitats, with applications of 1-7 x 109
  dauer larvae/ha. Control levels range from 70-99% (Georgis & Hague 1991). Mass culture has
  been facilitated because the symbiotic bacteria and nematodes can be grown on
  a variety of artificial media in
  vitro (Friedman 1990).  Neotylenchid Nematodes (Genus Deladenus).--The facultative parasitic nematode Deladenus siricidicola
  was used to control Sirex
  wood wasps in exotic pine forests in Tasmania and Victoria, Australia. Two
  phases occur in the life cycle, a free-living phase that feeds on fungi in
  trees, which are transmitted by the Sirex
  wasps, and a parasitic phase that invades wasp larvae, develops in larvae and
  adults, and destroys the eggs of adult females. The latter phase consists of
  females that first develop as free-living nematodes, and then invade the wasp
  larvae to complete their parasitic development. The free-living phase can be
  mass cultured by feeding the nematodes the fungi grown in vitro.
  They can then be inoculated into holes bored in trees in infested forest
  areas. Bedding (1974) was able to attain parasitism rates of >90% of Sirex wasps over four years,
  which reduced the number of trees killed from 200 to zero over that time
  period and in a 1,000 acre forest in Tasmania.  ------------------------------------- Van Driesche &
  Bellows Account Nematode Pathogens of
  Arthropods Nematodes That Attack
  Arthropods Steinernematidae and Heterorhabditidae.  Van Driesche
  & Bellows (1996) noted that nematodes represent a single phylum, the
  Nematoda, within which about 9 families occur that are parasitic on insects
  and have potential for use as
  biological control agents. Nematodes are translucent, usually elongate, and
  cylindrical in form. The body is covered with an elastic, noncellular
  cuticle, but is not segmented. Unlike bacteria, viruses, and protozoa,
  nematodes are multicellular animals that possess well-developed excretory,
  nervous, digestive, muscular, and reproductive systems. However, they do not
  have circulatory or respiratory systems. The digestive system consists of a
  mouth, buccal cavity, intestine, rectum, and anus. Nematode taxonomy is based
  largely on sexual characters of adults; so that, immature stages are
  difficult or impossible to identify Nematodes are
  diverse, being found in nearly all habitats. Nematodes may be free- living or
  parasitic on either plants or animals. Nematode associations with insects
  range from phoresy to parasitism. Some nematodes, such as Beddingia
  siricidicola, have complex life histories with both parasitic and free
  living cycles that may continue indefinitely. Many nematodes
  have relatively simple life cycles with three life stages: eggs, juveniles,
  and adults. Mated female nematodes deposit eggs in the environment: the first
  juvenile stage usually molts inside the egg and emerges as a second stage
  juvenile. Most nematodes molt four times. In many groups, the third stage
  juvenile remains ensheathed in the cuticle of the second stage, which
  provides it with increased resistance to adverse conditions. This third stage
  form is called a dauer juvenile, dauer being the German word for durability.
  Molting to the adult stage may occur inside the host or free in the
  environment. All nematode stages, except the egg, are mobile. Most nematodes
  have separate, single-sexed individuals and mating is required. Nematode
  infections usually occur in the hemocoel, but in some groups such as the
  Phaenopsitylenchidae (e.g., Beddingia) and Iotonchiidae (e.g., Paraiotonchium
  ) nematodes may invade the sexual organs. Nematode infections may severely
  affect the host, causing debilitation, castration, or death. Most of the obligatory
  parasitic nematodes are relatively host specific and are associated with one
  or a small group of hosts. However, some groups such as the steinernematids
  and heterorhabditids, often have broad host ranges under laboratory
  conditions. But, such laboratory host ranges are typically broader, as is
  true in many kinds of natural enemies, than actual host ranges in nature
  because of the absence in such tests of ecological factors that restrict host
  contacts to species found only in certain habitats. In nematodes,
  unlike other pathogens, host finding may be an active process in which
  nematodes move towards and recognize hosts using cues such as bacterial
  gradients, host fecal components, or carbon dioxide (Grewal et al. 1993a).
  Nematode species vary in their host searching strategies, with some being
  ambush predators and others actively moving in search of hosts (Kaya et al.
  1993). Host entrance may be a passive process, as when nematode eggs or
  juveniles of Tetradonematidae are ingested by larvae of sciarid flies.
  However, most of the time host penetration is an active process in which
  juvenile nematodes penetrate hosts through the integument or natural openings
  (mouth, anus, spiracles). In the cases of natural openings, nematodes seeking
  entrance have only to move through the opening, avoiding efforts of the host
  to brush them aside (in the case of the mouth). Once inside the gut,
  nematodes use mechanical devices such as stylets, and spears, to puncture the
  gut wall and enter the hemocoel, where infection occurs. Stylets and spears
  may also be used externally to perforate the cuticle to penetrate directly to
  the hemocoel in some groups. Other kinds of nematodes, such as the
  Sphaerulariidae, may use adhesive materials that attach the nematode to the
  host=s cuticle assisting in cuticle perforation with stylets. Nematode
  infections produce relatively few external signs other than, sometimes,
  distended abdomens or changes in color. An exception to this is the formation
  of intercaste or intersex individuals infected by mermithids. Internal
  effects of infection my be profound. Sterility is induced by several groups
  of nematodes, including Mermithidae. Phaenopsitylenchidae, and Iotonchiidae.
  Molting may be inhibited in some cases. Behaviors of nematode-infected hosts
  may be abnormal. Infected individuals may have difficulty walking or flying
  normally, or may show unnatural phototropisms.  Mermithids
  differ from other nematodes because they leave their hosts before reaching
  the adult stage. Postparasitic juveniles exit from hosts and then molt to
  adults that mate and produce progeny as free-living stages. Steinernematids
  and heterorhabditids, the groups of nematodes used most extensively in
  augmentative biological control, kill their hosts in 2-3 days, a shorter time
  than for other groups of nematodes. This happens because these families have
  mutualistic bacteria in their intestines (Xenorhabdus spp. & Photorhabdis
  spp.) That kill hosts by septicemia. Juvenile nematodes reach the hemocoel by
  penetrating the midgut wall after being ingested by the host, or by
  penetrating the host integument. Xenorhabdus spp. Or Photorhabdis
  spp. bacteria are then released into the host hemocoel by defecation of the
  juvenile nematodes. Juveniles feed saprophytically on the dead host=s tissues and
  then mature to adults which reproduce. When a new generation of the dauer
  stage is attained, they leave the host cadaver. Nematodes in the
  families Phaenopsitylenchidae and Iotonchiidae include both facultative and obligate
  parasites. The phaenopsitylenchid Beddingia siricidicola has two life
  cycles. One is free living and feeds on a fungus that is mutualistic with the
  insect host. This fungus is spread by the host (a siricid wood wasp) and
  grows in the cambium of the host tree attacked by the wasp. In the
  free-living cycle, juvenile nematodes feed on fungus, become adults, and lay
  eggs. In the parasitic life cycle, adult female nematodes penetrate the
  cuticle of wood wasp larvae which themselves feed on the fungus. After the
  host insect has pupated, nematodes develop in the hemocoel and produce
  offspring that invade the developing eggs of the wood wasp. When the wood
  wasp oviposits in new fungal patches, it deposits nematode-infected eggs
  rather than healthy ones. The eggs are killed by the nematodes, which emerge
  and continue their development, either through the fungus-based life cycle or
  the insect-based life cycle depending on the presence or absence of insect
  hosts on the patch. Similarly, the iotonchiid Paraiotonchium autumnale,
  a parasite of Musca autumnalis, invades ovaries of its host and is
  dispersed in the habitat by the fly=s oviposition attempts, as does Paraiotonchium
  muscaedomesticae Color & Nguyen, a parasitoid of Musca domestica
  (Coler & Nguyen 1994). Please refer to Gaugler & Kaya 1990, Kaya 1993
  and Tanada & Kaya (1993) for further details. Nematodes That
  Attack Arthropods Van Driesch
  & Bellows (1998) reported that the classification of entomopathogenicc
  nematodes at the family level has changed significantly since the mid 1900's.
  Recent discussions are given by Maggenti (1991) and Remillet and Laumond
  (1991). Reviews of nematodes associated with anhropods were provided by
  Poinar (1986), Kaya (1993), Kaya ind Gaugler (1993), and Tanada and Kaya
  (1993). Of the 30 or more families of nematodes associated with insects, only
  nine have members with any potential as biological control agents:
  Tetradonematidae, Mermithidae, Steinernematidae, Heterorhabditidae,
  Phaenopsitylenchidae, Iotonchiliidae, Allantonematidae, Parasitylenchidae
  and, Sphaerulariidae. Most attention has beem focused on two families, the
  Steinermeatidae and Heterorhabditidae. These are associated with pathogenic
  symbiotic bacteria that enable them to rapidly kill a wide range of hosts.
  Members of five other families (Tetradonematidae, Mermithidae,
  Phaenopsitylenchidae, Iotonchiidae and also merit attention. Steinernematidae
  and Heterorhabditidae Several species
  in the genera Steinernematidae and Heterorhabditidae have been the
  focus of most efforts to develop commercial uses of nematodes (Gaugler &
  Kaya 1990; Kaya 1993; Kaya and Gaugler 1993; Tanada and Kaya 1993).
  Synonomies of' species names in these genera complicate the interpretation of
  literature citations. Ten species are recognized in Steinernema (Doucet
  and Doucet 1990) and three in Heterorhabditis (Poinar 1990). Kaya and
  Gaugler 1993) listed these and discussed their nomenclature, and Smith et al.
  (1992) gave a bibliography of research on these  These families
  have been used as commercial pest control agents because they have the
  following atttributes (Poinar 1986): a wide host ringe; an ability to kill
  the host within 48 hours; a capacity for growth on artificial media; a
  durable infective stage capable of being stored; a lack of host resistance;
  and the apparent safety to the environment. These nematodes
  invade hosts through natural openings (mouth, spiracles, anus) or woundsand
  penetrate into the haemocoel. Bacteria in the genera Xenorbabdus or
  Pbotorbabdus, syimbiotic to the nematode but pathogenic to the host, are
  released into the hemocoel and quickly kill the host. The nematodes then
  develop saprophytically on the decomposing host tissues. Gaugler and Kaya
  (1990) and Kaya and Gaugler (1993) provide information on rearingand using these
  groups of nematodes for pest control. These nematodes work best in moist
  environments such as soil. Commercial markets for some strains have been
  established and large scale introduction systems developed (Kaya 1985:
  Gaugler and Kaya 1990). In addition to
  the augmentative use of nematodes in these two families, some species with
  more narrow host ranges have been imported for the control of immigrant
  pests; for examplee, Steinernema scapterisci was introduced into
  Florida in a program to provide biological control of immigrant species of Scapteriscus
  mole crickets (Parkman et al. 1993). Tetradonema
  plicans is a
  tetradonematid that infects larvae of Sciara (Diptera: Sciaridae),
  which are pests in glasshouse and mushroom crops. Effective control of these
  root gnats was obtained by Peloquin and Platzer (1993) with applications of T.
  plicans eggs at a ratio of 10 eggs per host larva. Cultures of the
  nematode can he maintained on hosts reared on a composted media of sphagnum moss,
  shredded paper, and commercial rabbit food. Host larvae ingest eggs or,
  perhaps, young larvae. Nematode larvae then penetrate the gut and enter the
  hemocoel, where they mature and cause the death of the host. Adult nematodes
  mate in the host and females either exit and lay eggs outside the host or
  remain in the host, in which case eggs are released into the soil as the host
  and female nematode decay. The nematode Romanomermis
  culicivorax Ross & Smith attacks larvae of various mosquitoes. The
  life cycle is divided between stages that occur within the host and others
  that occur outside of the host. Infective nematode larvae find hosts,
  penetrate the integument, and enter the host's hemocoel. Larvae partially
  mature inside hosts, penetrate through the host integument, and emerge into
  the environment as fourth stage larvae. They later transform into adults,
  mate, and lay eggs, which hatch and produce infective juveniles to resume the
  cycle. This nematode was developed as a commercial product under the name
  Skeeter DOOM, but the product failed commercially because of storage and
  transportation problems (Poinar 1979). The nematode Beddingia
  siticidicola was introduced from New Zealand into Australia where it
  contributed substantially to the suppression of a major pest of conifer
  plantations, the European wood wasp Sirex noctilio (Bedding 1984). The
  nematode invades the ovaries of the adult wood wasp, killing the eggs. The
  wasp, however, continues to oviposit, with the result that nematodes rather
  than eggs are deposited in new trees, spreading the nematode. The iotonchiid Paraiotoncbium
  aut mnaic, (Nickle), a native of Europe, was discovered in New York in
  1964 attacking the face fly, Musca a t mnalis I)e Geer. The nematodes
  m@tte in dling and enter fly larvae. Nematodes develop through two
  generations but do not kill the host, which develops to the adult stage. At
  this point nematodes are present in the fly's ovaries, reducing egg
  production. The adult fly, instead of laying eggs, deposits nematodes. A
  laboratory production method for this species was developed by Stoffolano
  (1973). A species of iotonchiid attacking Musca domestica has recently
  been recorded from Brazil (Coler and Nguyen 1994). The nematode Tripius
  sciarae (Boiven) attacks sciarid and mycetophilid flies in Europe
  and North America. The nematode infects its host in the larval stage but does
  not immediately kill it. Some iiifected hosts develop to the adult stage, but
  their reproductive systems are destroyed by nematodes that are spread by
  oviposition attempts of infected flies. The nematode is easily reared and
  capable of controlling fungus gnat infestations in glasshouses (Poinar 1965). A number of
  plant-parasitic nematodes in the Tylenchina, especially the family
  Anguinidae, induce galls on plant foliage. The taxonomy of this group is
  reviewed by Siddiqi (1986). Some nematodes in this group are resistant to
  dehydration, a feature that enhances their survival. A number of species in
  the group have been considered for use in biological control through
  augmentation (Parker 1991). One species (Subanguina piciidis Kidanova
  & Ivanova) has been introduced against an adventive plant, Centaurea
  diffusa Lamarck (Julien 1992).  Included are
  a diverse group of eucaryotes in the Kingdom Protista, which are unicellular
  and motile (Levine et al. 1980). Included are species that are free-living
  and saprophytic, commensal, symbiotic or parasitic. The cell contains a
  variety of organelles, but no cell
  wall, and they vary in size and shape. They feed by ingestion or
  adsorption, and vegetative reproduction is by binary or multiple fission.
  Both asexual and sexual reproduction occur, with the latter often very
  complex and used for identification. Many protozoa possess a resistant spore
  stage that is also useful in taxonomy. The kingdom is divided into a series
  of phyla based primarily on the mode of locomotion and structure of
  locomotory organelles, which includes the Sarcomastigophora (flagellates
  & amoebae), Apicomplexa (sporozoa), Microspora (microsporidia),
  Acetospora (haplosporidia) and Ciliophora (ciliates). Some protozoa, such as
  amoebae and ciliates, are easily cultured in
  vitro, while many of the
  obligate intracellular parasites have not been grown outside of cells. Biological Characteristics.--Many species of protozoans are associated with insects and the
  biology of these associations includes a range from symbionts to parasites.
  Parasitic species typically cause chronic diseases. Many parasites,
  especially microsporidia, increase slowly in insect populations, eventually
  causing epizootics that are followed by a rapid decline in the insect
  population. Nevertheless, research has shown that protozoa have only a small
  potential for use as fast-acting microbial insecticides, because of the
  chronic nature of the diseases they cause and the lack of a mass culture
  procedure. Some protozoans, microsporidia in particular, may be used as
  classical biological control agents or in intermediate and long range pest
  population management schemes. There is
  considerable diversity in life cycles and biologies (see Brooks 1988, Canning
  1982, Henry 1990, & Maddox 1987). However, the group with the most
  potential, the microsporidia, deserve a more detailed treatment here.  Microsporidia.--These protozoans, in the Phylum Microspora, are the most
  common and widely studied of protozoans that cause important insect diseases.
  Over 800 species are known, most having been described from insects (Brooks
  1988). They are found principally in Coleoptera, Diptera, Orthoptera and
  Lepidoptera, but are probably found in all orders. Protozoan epizootics in
  insects populations are usually caused by microsporidia.  All
  microsporidia are obligate intracellular parasites, which lack mitochondria. They produce spores
  that are distinguished by the presence of a polar filament, or long coiled
  tube within the spore that is used to infect hosts with the sporoplasm (Vavra
  1976). A typical life cycle begins with the ingestion of the spore by a
  susceptible insect. Once in the midgut, the polar filament extrudes, rapidly
  injecting the sporoplasm into host tissue. The sporoplasm is unicellular but
  may be uni- or binucleate. Upon entry into the cytoplasm of a host cell, such
  as the fat body in many insects, the sporoplasm forms a plasmodium, or meront, which undergoes many cycles
  of vegetative growth, or merogony.
  During such cycles, the cells multiply repeatedly, dividing by binary or
  multiple fission, and spreading to other cells, and in many species to other
  tissues of the host. After several merogonic cycles, the microsporidian
  undergoes sporulation, consisting of two principal phases, sporogony (a terminal reproductive
  division committed to sporulation) and spore morphogenesis. In sexual phases, meiosis occurs early during
  sporogony. The spores, generally measuring several microns in diam. and
  length, have thick walls and are highly refractile when viewed by phase
  microscopy. The disease often lasts for several weeks, during which spores
  accumulate in the tissues of infected hosts yielding billions per individual.
  Systematics of microsopridia is based on the size and structure of the
  spores, life cycles and host associations. Many microsporidia are transmitted
  vertically from adult females to larvae via the egg (transovarially) in addition to ingestion. Some species are host
  specific whereas other occur in many species of the same insect family or
  order. Biological Control Attributes.--Insect populations are often effectively reduced by
  naturally occurring epizootics of microsporidia. However, accurate prediction
  is not possible. For example, the epizootics caused by Nosema pyrausta
  (Paillot) in the European corn borer, Ostrinia
  nubilalis (Maddox 1987) are
  helpful in pest control, but cannot be depended upon. Therefore, research
  emphasis has been on inundative releases. Due to the
  absence of mitochondria, microsporidia cannot be cultured on artificial
  media, and spores must be grown on living hosts. Yields can be high (10 9-10
  spores/host). The number of larvae that have to be grown to treat a hectare
  and infect most of the target host population is similar to the requirements
  for nuclear polyhidrosis viruses. However, because of the chronic nature of
  the infections, practical control is usually not possible (Maddox et al.
  1981).  Vairimorpha necatrix, a dimorphic species having a broad host range among noctuid
  larvae, is an example of problems one encounters when microsporidia are used
  as microbial insecticides. Fuxa & Brooks (1979) found that application of
  spores at a rate of 1012 per acre reduced feeding damage as
  effectively as Dipel (B. thuringiensis, while rates as
  high as 1013 spores/acre often do not give adequate control. When
  the same rate was used against Heliothis
  zea on soybeans, even though
  99% of larvae became infected, thee was only a small reduction in feeding
  damage.  Nosema locustae Canning, when used
  against grasshoppers in a population management sense, reduced grasshopper
  densities by 50% 28-30 days after application of 2.5 x 109 spores
  per hectare. Production costs for this application were very low, as the
  yield of spores from Melanoplus
  differentialis averaged 6.4
  x 109 spores per grasshopper, or about 1/6th a grasshopper per
  acre! Nosema locustae is the only protozoan
  registered by the Environmental Protection Agency for use in insect control.    REFERENCES:   Please refer to: <bc-50.ref.htm> and <vandries.ref.htm>                     [References also may be found at  MELVYL Library ]   |