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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Field performance of perennial ryegrass (Lolium oerenne) infected with toxin-free fungal endophytes (Neotyphodium spp.)

TLDR
A national series of six small plot trials were sown in 1996 and four in 1997 to evaluate the performance of six novel fungal endophytes in Grasslands Nui perennial ryegrass as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
A national series of six small plot trials were sown in 1996 and four in 1997 to evaluate the performance of six novel fungal endophytes in Grasslands Nui perennial ryegrass. These endophytes do not produce the mammalian toxins, ergovaline and lolitrem B, but produce peramine, a feeding deterrent to the major ryegrass pest, Argentine stem weevil (ASW). Trials included the naturally occurring endophyte (wild-type) which produces both toxins, and an endophyte-free (nil) treatment. Pasture production was measured regularly and samples were taken at least once each summer-autumn from all trials for assessment of ASW damage. Black beetle larval damage was recorded on three trials. The toxin-free endophytes, AR1, AR12, AR22 and the wild-type were equally effective at reducing ASW adult feeding and larval damage significantly below that which occurred in nil treatments. Ryegrass infected with AR1, AR12, AR22 and the wild-type endophyte was damaged less by black beetle larvae than ryegrass without endophyte. The effect of AR24 on insect damage was variable and two other toxin-free endophytes, AR17 and AR506, which had low infection rates, seldom reduced either ASW or black beetle damage. Yield differences between treatments were found on two of 21 sampling occasions between October and December and 12 of 30 sampling occasions between January and April. During summer-autumn, wild-type, AR1, AR12 and AR22 gave higher ryegrass yields than the nil, AR17 and AR506 treatments. In the second year of the 1996-sown trials, productivity of ryegrass with AR1 in the summer-autumn tended to be lower than that of the wild-type with significant differences occasionally occurring. Yield differences were correlated with either ASW or black beetle damage in North Island trials and with percent endophyte infection at all sites. Differences in yield at Lincoln, Canterbury, were attributed to pasture mealy bug. Three conclusions were drawn from these results: 1. Endophytes are very important for maximising ryegrass yield during summer and early autumn. 2. The effect of endophytes on yield is at least partly due to the insect resistance they impart. 3. The field performance of three toxin-free endophytes, AR1, AR12 and AR22, equalled that of the wild-type in terms of increased insect resistance but did not always match it in plant growth. Keywords: AR1, Argentine stem weevil, black beetle, endophyte strain, ergovaline, insect damage, lolitrem B, Neotyphodium lolii, ryegrass yield

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The exploitation of epichloae endophytes for agricultural benefit

TL;DR: This review weaves together the different strands of multidisciplinary research aimed at ultimately exploiting epichloae endophytes for increased pasture performance.
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Forages and pastures symposium: fungal endophytes of tall fescue and perennial ryegrass: pasture friend or foe?

TL;DR: The biology of tall fescue and perennial ryegrass and the impact of grass-endophyte associations on the sustainability of pasture ecosystems and their likely response to future changes in climate are described and management strategies focused predominantly on the success of endophyte-infected perennial rrass in New Zealand and Australia are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of the fungal endophyte Neotyphodium lolii is not a major determinant of the distribution of fungal alkaloids in Lolium perenne plants.

TL;DR: The results indicate that endophyte colonisation is a minor determinant of alkaloid levels, and that accumulation of the alkaloids relative to the endophytes mycelium is affected by plant genotype and tissue in a manner specific to each alkaloidal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perennial ryegrass breeding in New Zealand: a dairy industry perspective

TL;DR: The review highlights that many aspects of ryegrass growth and ecology have been manipulated through breeding, with evidence to show that plant performance has been altered as a result, but it is not clear to what extent these gains have contributed to the economic development of the NZ dairy industry.
Journal ArticleDOI

The fungal endophyte Epichloë typhina improves photosynthesis efficiency of its host orchard grass (Dactylis glomerata)

TL;DR: A new mechanism allowing plants to cope with the withdrawal of a significant fraction of its energy resources by the endophytic fungi Epichloë typhina is proposed, which is the first to report this phenomenon.
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