Termite Presence and Feeding on Loblolly Pine Wood Differs Among Four Root-Infecting Bluestain (ophiostomatoid) Fungal Species

Author:

Clay Natalie A1ORCID,Siegert Courtney2,Tang Juliet D3,Little Nathan S4,Eckhardt Lori G5,Riggins John J6

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Louisiana Tech University, Ruston, LA, USA

2. Department of Forestry, Forest and Wildlife Research Center, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS, USA

3. USDA Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, 201 Lincoln Green, Starkville, MS, USA

4. USDA-ARS, Southern Insect Management Research Unit, 141 Experiment Station Road, Stoneville, MS, USA

5. School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, Auburn University, 602 Duncan Drive, Suite 3301, Auburn, AL, USA

6. Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology, and Plant Pathology, Box 9775, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS, USA

Abstract

Abstract Bark beetles and root weevils can impact forests through tree death on landscape scales. Recently, subterranean termites have been linked to these beetles via the presence of bluestain fungi (Ascomycota: Ophiostomataceae), which are vectored to trees by beetles. However, only a small subset of bluestain species have been examined. Here, we tested whether termite-bluestain association patterns in the field reflect termite feeding preference in laboratory choice trials. We documented the presence of four bluestain fungi (Leptographium procerum (W.B. Kendr.), L. terebrantis (Barras & Perry), Grosmannia huntii (Rob.-Jeffr.), and G. alacris (T.A. Duong, Z.W. de Beer & M.J. Wingf.) in the roots of 2,350 loblolly pine trees in the southeastern United States and whether termites were present or absent on these roots and paired this with laboratory choice feeding trials. Termites were found 2.5-fold on tree roots with at least one bluestain fungus present than tree roots without bluestain fungi. Although termites in this study and others were associated with L. procerum, L. terebrantis, and marginally G. huntii, termites only showed preferential feeding on wood inoculated with G. huntii in laboratory trials. This suggests that increased termite presence on wood with bluestain fungi may be driven by factors other than increased wood palatability. Termites could thus disproportionately affect wood turnover rates for specific pools (e.g., bark beetle and root weevil attacked trees) and in some cases (e.g., G. huntii) accelerate wood decomposition. This study supports the growing evidence that the association between subterranean termites and bluestain fungi is spatially and taxonomically widespread.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institution of Food and Agriculture

U.S. Department of Agriculture

McIntire Stennis

Forest Health Cooperative

Auburn University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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