Ks. Johnson et al., TOXICITY OF BACILLUS-THURINGIENSIS VAR KURSTAKI TO 3 NONTARGET LEPIDOPTERA IN-FIELD STUDIES, Environmental entomology, 24(2), 1995, pp. 288-297
Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner var. kurstaki is is used extensively i
n aerial sprays for control of forest defoliators such as gypsy moth,
Lymantria dispar (L.), and western spruce budworm, Choristoneura occid
entalis Freeman. Although the short half-life of B. thuringiensis in t
ie field is believed to minimize its impact on nontarget Lepidoptera,
there is increasing concern over the immediate and long-term effects o
f the widespread aerial application of this microbial insecticide. We
examined the toxicity and persistence of B. thuringiensis toward lanae
of tree-feeding swallowtail butterflies (Papilio glaucus L. and P. ca
nadensis Rothschild Er Jordan) and the promethea moth, Callosamia prom
ethea (Drury), on seven of their natural host plants. B. thuringiensis
applied to trees at a rate of 40 BIU/ha with ii backpack sprayer equi
pped with a rotary atomizer nozzle (Micronair) was toxic to early and
later (fourth) instars, regardless of the host the larvae were feeding
on. Long-term persistence of B. thuringiensis on potted tulip trees p
laced in exposed or below-canopy locations was monitored at 0, 10, 20,
30, and 40 d after the spray. Toxicity toward early-instar P. glaucus
persisted for up to 30 d in 1992 and 1993 field studies. Survival on
trees sprayed with B. thuringiensis tended to be lower in below-canopy
locations, but differences were not always significant. The results o
f these studies indicate that B. thuringiensis sprays are toxic to som
e nontarget lepidopterans for at least 30 d after the spray.