Affiliation:
1. University of Nottingham, School of Biosciences, Division of Plant and Crop Sciences, Sutton Bonington, United Kingdom
2. Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We hypothesized that interactions between fusarium head blight-causing pathogens and herbivores are likely to occur because they share wheat as a host plant. Our aim was to investigate the interactions between the grain aphid,
Sitobion avenae
, and
Fusarium graminearum
on wheat ears and the role that host volatile chemicals play in mediating interactions. Wheat ears were treated with aphids and
F. graminearum
inoculum, together or separately, and disease progress was monitored by visual assessment and by quantification of pathogen DNA and mycotoxins. Plants exposed to both aphids and
F. graminearum
inoculum showed accelerated disease progression, with a 2-fold increase in disease severity and 5-fold increase in mycotoxin accumulation over those of plants treated only with
F. graminearum
. Furthermore, the longer the period of aphid colonization of the host prior to inoculation with
F. graminearum
, the greater the amount of pathogen DNA that accumulated. Headspace samples of plant volatiles were collected for use in aphid olfactometer assays and were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and GC-coupled electroantennography. Disease-induced plant volatiles were repellent to aphids, and 2-pentadecanone was the key semiochemical underpinning the repellent effect. We measured aphid survival and fecundity on infected wheat ears and found that both were markedly reduced on infected ears. Thus, interactions between
F. graminearum
and grain aphids on wheat ears benefit the pathogen at the expense of the pest. Our findings have important consequences for disease epidemiology, because we show increased spread and development of host disease, together with greater disease severity and greater accumulation of pathogen DNA and mycotoxin, when aphids are present.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
36 articles.
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