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Len Holmes, Michael Menefee and Floyd Inman III Biotechnology Research and Training Center

In-vitro mass production of the beneficial nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora using liquid culture fermentation technology. Len Holmes, Michael Menefee and Floyd Inman III Biotechnology Research and Training Center University of North Carolina at Pembroke Pembroke, NC 28372.

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Len Holmes, Michael Menefee and Floyd Inman III Biotechnology Research and Training Center

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  1. In-vitro mass production of the beneficial nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora using liquid culture fermentation technology Len Holmes, Michael Menefee and Floyd Inman III Biotechnology Research and Training Center University of North Carolina at Pembroke Pembroke, NC 28372

  2. Agricultural Biological Control Products • Biocontrol: Reduction of pest populations by natural enemies; involves active human role. • Natural enemies include: Parasitoids, predators, microbes & beneficial nematodes. • Targets: animals, weeds and disease. • During last century hundreds of exotic control agents have been used. (North Carolina State University)

  3. How Biocontrol Directly Benefits Agriculture • Controls insect or weed pests to manageable levels (potentially permanent). • Reduces hazard of chemical use and acute or long-term impact on humans and non-target organisms. • No potential resistance build-up as with chemical inputs. • No delay between application and harvesting. • Residue-free products from farms. • No phytotoxic effects on young plants (abortion of flowers). • Public is more accepting of biological control than chemical agents.

  4. Barriers to Adoption of Biocontrol Approaches I. Necessity of educated management and planning. II. More complete and accessible information on risks to environment and non-target organisms is needed. III. Knowledge on insect pest range and biology of insect host(s). IV. Abiotic and biotic factor interactions with biocontrol agent. V. Knowledge of synchronization of host and it natural enemies. VI. Knowledge of dispersal technology

  5. Beneficial Nematodes How they are beneficial? Environmentally-friendly substitute for chemical insecticide Photorhabdus luminescens bacteria are symbiotically associated with the beneficial nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora Nematode recovery in liquid culture can vary considerably based upon many factors such as: bacterial phase variant, media formulation, bacterial density, etc.

  6. Life-cycle complexes for beneficial nematodes • Bacteria colonizes inside the infective juveniles (IJs) • IJs live in the soil until they invade a susceptible insect host, seeking the hemolymph • IJs release the bacteria into the insect’s hemolymph • The bacteria participate in overcoming the insect’s defense system and killing the host • Nematode growth and reproduction take place • Nutrient limitation in the host insect cadaver • Non-feeding IJ stage emerges into the soil to forage for a new host Tripartite interaction Ref: Ehlers RU (2001) Mass production of entomopathogenic nematodes for plant protection. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol (2001) 56:623–633

  7. Development stages of Nematodes IJ3 Young hermaphrodite Adult Egg J1 Endotokia

  8. Objective • Mass production of EPN Heterorhabditis bacteriophora by In-vitro liquid culture fermentation technology using three different bioreactor working volumes of 5, 10 and 30 liters and scale-up. In vivo culture In vitro: solid culture In vitro: liquid culture

  9. Outline of beneficial nematode culturing protocol

  10. Challenges of the microbiology • Phase variation of bacterial symbiont • Fecundity of nematode inoculum • Optimization of media composition • Agitation, dissolved oxygen and pH • Contamination (T = 24 hr) (t = 0)

  11. 10 Liter 30 Liter 5 Liter Scale-up for ProDUCtion

  12. Challenges in Production and Commercialization • Consistency of mass production • Production capacity • Production costs • Pricing and shipping costs • Marketing • UNCP Thomas Family Center for Entrepreneurship • Website (http://sites.google.com/site/braveguardnematodes • Two kinds of customers: Internet & regional • Regional Field Testing

  13. References • Ehlers, R., Lunau, S., Krasomil K. and Osterfeld, K. 1998. Liquid culture of the entomopathogenic nematodebacterium-complex Heterorhabditis megidis/Photorhabdus luminescens. BioControl 43: 77–86 • Ehlers, R.U. 2001. Mass production of entomopathogenic nematodes for plant protection. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 56: 623–633. • Inman, F.L. III and L.D. Holmes. 2012a. Mass production of the beneficial nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora and its bacterial symbiont Photorhabdus luminescens. Indian J. Microbiol. 52(3): 316-324. doi:10.1007/s12088-012-0270-2 • Shapiro-Ilan, D. and Gaugler, R. 2002. Production technology for entomopathogenic nematodes and their bacterial symbionts. Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology. 28: 137 –146 • Upadhyay, D., Kooliyottil, R., Mandjiny, S., Inman III, F. and Holmes, L. 2013. Mass production of the beneficial nematode Steinernema carpocapsae utilizing a fed-batch culturing process. ESci J. Plant Pathol. 02 (01): 52-58 • Yoo, S., Brown, I. and Gaugler, R. 2000. Liquid media development for Heterorhabditis bacteriophora: lipid source and concentration. Appl microbial Biotechnol. 54: 759-763

  14. THANK YOU!

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