We present a mutualism between a stem-boring weevil, Apion onopordi Kirby (Coleoptera: Apionidae), and a rust fungus, Puccinia punctiformis (Str.) Röhl. (Uredinales), both parasites of the creeping thistle, Cirsium arvense (L.) Scop. (Asteraceae). Females, but not males, of A. onopordi induced systemic rust infections of thistle shoots in the season after they were attacked by the weevil, indicating that insect oviposition is a crucial stage in pathogen transmission. Adult weevils emerged from systemically infected thistle shoots were heavier than weevils from healthy C. arvense shoots. Heavier females had a higher fecundity and laid larger eggs. The weevil preferred to deposit eggs in systemically rust-infected over healthy thistle shoots, which seemed to be a sub-optimal host. This is to our knowledge the first report of a mutualistic interaction between an herbivorous insect and a biotrophic plant pathogen. The mechanism responsible for the advantage of rust-infected shoots for A. onopordi causes a different outcome in other thistle herbivores, and therefore can not be explained by a general enhancement of nutritional quality in rust-infected tissue. This mutualism likely has evolved from a competitive relationship. Unlike other thistle herbivores A. onopordi seems to be better suited as mutualist for P. punctiformis because of its small impact on the host plant and its feeding niche on plant parts not directly associated with pathogen reproduction.
Summary
Slugs have been shown to cause severe damage in oilseed rape crops adjacent to sown wildflower strips. Rape can be protected from this damage by broadcasting a recommended dose of metaldehyde over the whole field area. This paper investigates whether severe slug damage can be prevented by applications of metaldehyde just along the wildflower strips thereby reducing the input of chemical molluscicide.
In this study, untreated control plots suffered severe crop loss at 1 m from all wildflower strips studied. However, all treatments of molluscicide protected rape from severe crop loss without significant differences among the three treatments (two different concentrations of metaldehyde applied in 50‐cm wide barriers along the strips and a recommended dose of metaldehyde broadcast over the whole study area).
Arion lusitanicus and Deroceras reticulatum were by far the most abundant slug pests found in the studied rape fields. Arion lusitanicus was very abundant in the wildflower strips and up to 1 m into the field; however, it was almost entirely absent at 3 m from the strips. Since D. reticulatum was evenly distributed over the whole field area, A. lusitanicus appeared to be responsible for the majority of damage in control plots 1 m from the wildflower strips.
Application of metaldehyde in a 50‐cm wide band has been shown to be practicable and efficient in protecting rape from severe slug damage near to wildflower strips. These reduced applications of molluscicide mean savings of time and money for farmers and can be recommended for practical application.
Despite recent ndings that mutualistic interactions between two species may be greatly affected by species external to the mutualism, the implications of such multi-species interactions for the population dynamics of the mutualists are virtually unexplored. In this paper, we ask how the mutualism between the shootbase boring weevil Apion onopordi and the rust fungus Puccinia punctiformis is in uenced by the dynamics of their shared host plant Cirsium arvense, and vice versa. In particular, we hypothesized that the distribution of the weevil's egg load between healthy and rust-infected thistles may regulate the abundance of the mutualists and their host plant. In contrast to our expectations we found that the dynamics of the mutualists are largely determined by the dynamics of their host. This is, to our knowledge, the rst demonstration that the dynamics of a mutualism are driven by a third, non-mutualistic species.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.