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Influence of inoculum density on population dynamics and dauer juvenile yields in liquid culture of biocontrol nematodes Steinernema carpocapsae and S. feltiae (Nematoda: Rhabditida)

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Abstract

For improvement of mass production of the rhabditid biocontrol nematodes Steinernema carpocapsae and Steinernema feltiae in monoxenic liquid culture with their bacterial symbionts Xenorhabdus nematophila and Xenorhabdus bovienii, respectively, the effect of the initial nematode inoculum density on population development and final concentration of dauer juveniles (DJs) was investigated. Symbiotic bacterial cultures are pre-incubated for 1 day prior to inoculation of DJs. DJs are developmentally arrested and recover development as a reaction to food signals provided by their symbionts. After development to adults, the nematodes produce DJ offspring. Inoculum density ranged from 1 to 10 × 103 DJ per milliliter for S. carpocapsae and 1 to 8 × 103 DJs per milliliter for S. feltiae. No significant influence of the inoculum density on the final DJ yields in both nematode species was recorded, except for S. carpocapsae cultures with a parental female density <2 × 103 DJs per milliliter, in which the yields increased with increasing inoculation density. A strong negative response of the parental female fecundity to increasing DJ inoculum densities was recorded for both species with a maximum offspring number per female of >300 for S. carpocapsae and almost 200 for S. feltiae. The compensative adaptation of fecundity to nematode population density is responsible for the lack of an inoculum (or parental female) density effect on DJ yields. At optimal inoculation density of S. carpocapsae, offspring were produced by the parental female population, whereas S. feltiae always developed a F1 female population, which contributed to the DJ yields and was the reason for a more scattered distribution of the yields. The F1 female generation was accompanied by a second peak in X. bovienii density. The optimal DJ inoculum density for S. carpocapsae is 3–6 × 103 DJs per milliliter in order to obtain >103 parental females per milliliter. Density-dependent effects were neither observed on the DJ recovery nor on the sex ratio in the parental adult generation. As recovery varied between different batches, assessment of the recovery of inoculum DJ batches is recommended. S. feltiae was less variable in DJ recovery usually reaching >90%. The recommended DJ inoculum density is >5 × 103 DJs per milliliter to reach >2 × 103 parental females per milliliter. The mean yield recorded for S. carpocapsae was 135 × 103 and 105 × 103 per mililiter for S. feltiae.

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Acknowledgement

The scholarship to the first author by the German Academic Exchange Service (http://www.daad.de) is gratefully acknowledged. Thanks are also due to Arne Peters for fruitful discussions on the results.

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Correspondence to Ralf-Udo Ehlers.

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Hirao, A., Ehlers, RU. Influence of inoculum density on population dynamics and dauer juvenile yields in liquid culture of biocontrol nematodes Steinernema carpocapsae and S. feltiae (Nematoda: Rhabditida). Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 85, 507–515 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00253-009-2095-4

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