The culture filtrate of a plant pathogenic fungus that infected Zinnia elegans and Hydrangea macrophylla was investigated for mosquitocidal constituents by bioassay guided isolation. The fungus responsible for the pat...The culture filtrate of a plant pathogenic fungus that infected Zinnia elegans and Hydrangea macrophylla was investigated for mosquitocidal constituents by bioassay guided isolation. The fungus responsible for the pathogenic effects on Zinnia elegans and Hydrangea macrophylla plants had been identified as Nigrospora spherica by molecular techniques. The mosquito adulticidal constituent in the culture filtrate was identified as phomalactone by spectroscopic techniques. Laboratory bioassays showed that phomalactone had larvicidal activity against permethrin susceptible and resistant Aedes aegypti larvae and topical adulticide activities on permethrin susceptible and resistant Aedes aegypti and Anopheles quadrimaculatus mosquitoes. Phomalactone was effective as a topical adulticide against the standard Orlando reference strain of Ae. aegypti with an LD50 of 0.64 μg/org. Activity against An. quadrimaculatus was 0.20 μg/org.展开更多
文摘The culture filtrate of a plant pathogenic fungus that infected Zinnia elegans and Hydrangea macrophylla was investigated for mosquitocidal constituents by bioassay guided isolation. The fungus responsible for the pathogenic effects on Zinnia elegans and Hydrangea macrophylla plants had been identified as Nigrospora spherica by molecular techniques. The mosquito adulticidal constituent in the culture filtrate was identified as phomalactone by spectroscopic techniques. Laboratory bioassays showed that phomalactone had larvicidal activity against permethrin susceptible and resistant Aedes aegypti larvae and topical adulticide activities on permethrin susceptible and resistant Aedes aegypti and Anopheles quadrimaculatus mosquitoes. Phomalactone was effective as a topical adulticide against the standard Orlando reference strain of Ae. aegypti with an LD50 of 0.64 μg/org. Activity against An. quadrimaculatus was 0.20 μg/org.