scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Black beetle damage to perennial ryegrass infected with AR1 endophyte

A.J. Popay, +1 more
- pp 267-271
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors evaluated the degree of resistance to black beetles provided by AR1 and found that black beetles were more resistant to AR1-infected ryegrass than to endophyte-free plants.
Abstract
AR1 is a new fungal endophyte that is being released in perennial ryegrass to New Zealand farmers This endophyte lacks the mammalian toxins, ergovaline and lolitrem B, but produces peramine which provides resistance to a major ryegrass pest, Argentine stem weevil (Listronotus bonariensis) Black beetle (Heteronychus arator) is another important pest of ryegrass in northern areas of New Zealand Adults are selective feeders, and avoid feeding on ryegrass infected with wildtype endophyte A limited supply of suitable food greatly reduces their reproductive capacity Laboratory and field investigations were therefore carried out to evaluate the degree of resistance to black beetle provided by AR1 Assessments of adult black beetle feeding were made on two field trials planted in autumn 1999 In both trials, adult feeding was significantly higher on ryegrass infected with AR1 than on ryegrass with wild-type but also significantly lower on AR1 than on endophyte-free ryegrass In a pot trial conducted in summer, black beetle adult damage to 4-week-old AR1-infected ryegrass was no different from damage to endophyte-free plants However in 6-month-old plants, damage to AR1 plants was significantly less than to endophyte-free plants and was similar to damage levels on wild-type plants A further pot trial showed that beetles overwintering on AR1 ryegrass had a higher reproductive capacity than those overwintering on wild-type infected ryegrass In February 2001, two field trials planted the previous June were sampled for black beetle larvae Black beetle presence was significantly higher on endophyte-free plots than on wild-type plots, with presence on AR1 intermediate between these treatments Ryegrass infected with AR1, although showing a degree of resistance to black beetle compared with endophyte-free ryegrass, is more susceptible to damage than wild-type, particularly in its first year of planting Limited data indicate that older AR1 swards may have similar resistance to that of the wild-type but further research is needed to clarify the effect of stand maturity on black beetle damage to ryegrass infected with this new endophyte Keywords: AR1, black beetle, endophyte, Heteronychus, Listronotus, Neotyphodium, ryegrass

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Epichloë Fungal Endophytes and Plant Defenses: Not Just Alkaloids

TL;DR: It is proposed that, in addition to producing protective alkaloids, endophytes enhance plant immunity against chewing insects by promoting endogenous defense responses mediated by the jasmonic acid (JA) pathway.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the Neotyphodium lolii / Lolium perenne symbiosis and its associated effects on animal and plant health, with particular emphasis on ryegrass staggers.

TL;DR: This review aims to provide a comprehensive summary of the current understanding of the N. lolii / L. perenne symbiosis, the toxins it is known to produce, their effects on animals and plants and the strategies used to control their ill effects while maximising their beneficial ones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occurrence and impact of pasture mealybug (Balanococcus poae) and root aphid (Aploneura lentisci) on ryegrass (Lolium spp.) with and without infection by Neotyphodium fungal endophytes

TL;DR: It is concluded that pasture mealybug are capable of inflicting severe damage to endophyte‐free ryegrass in Canterbury, particularly during dry summer‐autumn periods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Endophyte effects on major insect pests in Waikato dairy pasture

TL;DR: A paddock-scale field trial comparing pastures of perennial ryegrass without endophyte (Nil) or infected with the selected endophytes AR1, AR37 or the standard endophyts sown with clover was monitored for insect pests over 3 years, consistent with AR37 pastures having the lowest insect pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of novel endophytes in perennial ryegrass on herbage production and insect pests from pastures under dairy cow grazing in northern New Zealand

TL;DR: AR37 pastures had a higher ryegrass tiller density, especially after the 2008 summer drought (+130%), and less white clover than did AR1 pastures, but summer drought reduced concentrations of lolitrem B and epoxy-janthitrems to less than half the mid-summer peak concentrations in the other years.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Interrelationships between Acremonium lolii, peramine, and lolitrem B in perennial ryegrass

TL;DR: Although data for each month were variable, regression analyses showed that yearly mean concentrations of lolitrem B and peramine in individual plants were closely related to, and therefore probably largely determined by, yearlymean concentrations of A. lolii.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ergopeptine alkaloids and Neotyphodium lolii-mediated resistance in perennial ryegrass against adult Heteronychus arator (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)

TL;DR: It was observed that perennial ryegrass seed containing an endophyte strain that did not produce ergot alkaloids, but did produce other mycotoxins normally associated with N. lolii infection, did not deter H. aratorFeeding, and ergopeptine alkaloid derivatives diHydroergotamine, dihydroergocrystine, and alpha-bromoergocryptine were also active, although less so than the parent erg
Journal ArticleDOI

Perennial ryegrass seedling resistance to Argentine stem weevil

TL;DR: The presence of the Lolium endophyte fungus in perennial ryegrass seed confers resistance to adult Argentine stem weevil feeding in seedlings, which may be caused by the translocation in the seedling of a remnant chemical, associated with endophytes, which is diluted or metabolised as the plant develops.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of black beetle, Heteronychus arator (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) - population modelling.

TL;DR: It was concluded that populations are relatively stable in paspalum pastures, which could be considered as refuge areas during adverse climatic conditions and as an aid to prediction of population outbreaks on a regional basis.
Related Papers (5)