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The parasite Aspergillus flavus Link and other fungi of the biosphere of the alkali bee Nomia melanderi Ckll., in eastern Oregon and Washington

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title The parasite Aspergillus flavus Link and other fungi of the biosphere of the alkali bee Nomia melanderi Ckll., in eastern Oregon and Washington
Names Baker, Gerald Merritt (creator)
Roth, L. F. (advisor)
Date Issued 1969-04-28 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1969
Abstract The pathogenicity of A. flavus on alkali bee larvae was studied
using sample materials from three nesting sites of these soil
inhabiting bees along the Oregon-Washington state line. Soil
saprophytes of the biosphere of the alkali bee were also studied.
Field observations and direction of soil cores from bee beds
provided a basis for estimates of A. flavus disease at the three sites.
Fungi, including A. flavus and soil saprophytes were isolated from:
soil samples, the surface of adult alkali bees, pollen balls, and
larval feces.
In vitro disease induction experiments were carried out comparing
uninoculated larvae and larvae surface inoculated with conidia
of A. flavus. The tests were conducted at five levels of relative
humidity within each of three temperature treatments.
Field observations and soil cores revealed A. flavus as the pre-dominante fungus pathogen in two of the three sites studied. One site
was free of the pathogen.
Studies of soil dilution plates and fungal isolations from adult
bees, pollen balls, and larval feces disclosed propagules of A. flavus
in the biosphere of the bees in two of the three beds. Saprophytic
fungi of the biosphere did not vary significantly over a three year
period. These fungi provided a useful index of soil contamination of
adult bees, pollen balls, and larval feces.
Studies of the effect of relative humidity and temperature on
disease induction in larvae surface inoculated with A. flavus conidia
revealed that temperatures of 25° to 30°C and relative-humidities
from 90 to 100 percent favored disease development while lower temperatures
and/or lower humidities inhibited disease induction.
The increased incidence of A. flavus disease of larvae during
the spring and summer is considered to result from increasing soil
temperatures and relative humidities within the brood cells, Conversely,
a reduced incidence of disease during the fall and winter
results from lower temperatures.
Higher incidence of A. flavus disease in one of the beds (the
Garbe bed) was attributed to its age and higher bee population. Soil
cores taken from the Garbe bed to establish the Harris bed account
for the prevalence of disease in the latter. The lack of A. flavus disease in the Wallace-Key bed was not clear, but its younger age
and lower population density offer a partial explanation.
Control of A. flavus within the nesting site might logically aim
at elimination of the fungus from the soil. Sub-irrigation of the beds
with fungicide is one possible approach.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Aspergillus
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/46343

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