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Journal ArticleDOI

Two Epichloë festucae var. lolii endophytes in Lolium perenne reduce larval populations of the wheat sheath miner, Cerodontha australis

TLDR
Two Epichloë endophyte strains, AR47 and AR48, reduced the survival and feeding damage by C. australis larvae, but there was no evidence of an effect on adult female feeding or oviposition.
Abstract
The wheat sheath miner, Cerodontha australis Malloch (Diptera: Agromyzidae), is a small leaf‐ and stem‐mining fly that is native to New Zealand and eastern Australia where it feeds on grasses and cereals. Although not considered to be a major insect pest of pastures in New Zealand, it can be abundant during spring and summer in Waikato, New Zealand, and infests tillers of the introduced pasture plant, perennial ryegrass, Lolium perenne L. (Poaceae). Cerodontha australis is not deterred from feeding on L. perenne infected with commercially available strains of the fungal endophyte Epichloë festucae var. lolii, which have been shown to provide protection from a range of other insect pests. In this study, three‐pot trials and periodic examination over 18 months of field‐collected L. perenne tillers showed that two Epichloë endophyte strains, AR47 and AR48, reduced the survival and feeding damage by C. australis larvae, but there was no evidence of an effect on adult female feeding or oviposition. Compared to other strains of E. festucae var. lolii endophytes tested, plants infected with AR47 and AR48 had fewer and smaller larvae and less larval mining. The number of tillers with mining was reduced in AR47 relative to endophyte‐free (Nil) by 57.1% (ranging from 25.0 to 92.5% across trials) and in AR48 by 67.1% (26.3–100%). Larvae in AR47 and AR48 were found further from the base of the tiller where they were less likely to damage the meristem and cause tiller death. The number of larvae and pupae in pseudostems was reduced in AR47 and AR48 compared with Nil by 78.4 and 82.0%, respectively, in the field trial. Very few larvae survived to pupation in AR47 and AR48 plants, with a reduction compared to Nil of over 81.5% in AR47 and over 97% in AR48 in each of the four trials presented here.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular identification of Cerodontha australis (Diptera: Agromyzidae) and its associated pupal endoparasitoids (Hymenoptera)

TL;DR: The wheat sheath miner, Cerodontha australis, is widespread and abundant in New Zealand and also occurs in eastern Australia as discussed by the authors , and the absence of online barcode sequences from voucher specimens for C. australises has precluded diagnosis using molecular techniques.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological and evolutionary traps.

TL;DR: Conservation and management protocols must be designed in light of, rather than in spite of, the behavioral mechanisms and evolutionary history of populations and species to avoid ‘trapping' them.
Book

Agromyzidae (Diptera) of Economic Importance

TL;DR: The Biology, Post-embryonic Development, and Economic Importance of Cryptochaetum Iceryae (Diptera, Agromyzidae) Parasitic on Icerya Purchasi (Coccidae, Monophlebini).
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology of Liriomyza

TL;DR: Most of the authors' knowledge concerning the biology of this genus comes from studies on economically important species, which reflects the dramatic rise of Liriomyza spp.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Association of a Lolium Endophyte with Ryegrass Staggers

TL;DR: Several groups of fungi produce tremorgens which, when injected into sheep, produce symptoms similar to those in field outbreaks of RGS, but under field conditions, populations of these fungi have not been shown to differ significantly between toxic and non-toxic pasture.
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