Mass rearing Halotydeus destructor (Tucker) (Acari : Penthaleidae) for use in summer screening of Trifolium subterraneum (L.) for mite resistance

1997 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 343 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Thackray ◽  
T. J. Ridsdill-Smith ◽  
D. J. Gillespie

Summary. Controlled environment experiments were conducted to establish some of the requirements for successful mass rearing of Halotydeus destructor (redlegged earth mite). Numbers of mites reared on Vicia sativa (common vetch) cv. Blanchefleur grown alone or on a mixture of vetch with Trifolium subterraneum (subterranean clover) cv. Goulburn, were significantly higher than those on subterranean clover or Arctotheca calendula (capeweed) alone. Populations reared on vetch grown in a sandy soil were significantly higher than those reared on vetch grown in a loamy soil, pure sand or pure loam. Covering the soil surface with a natural pasture mulch increased mite numbers compared with leaving the soil bare or placing plant pots inside ventilated cages. Subsequent changes in rearing methodology produced enough mites to enable summer screening of subterranean clover lines for resistance to H. destructorfor the first time. Over 20 000 mites can be produced from vetch at one time for screening tests throughout the year.


1996 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-252 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.R. Gaull ◽  
T.J. Ridsdill-Smith

AbstractThe foraging behaviour of the redlegged earth mite, Halotydeus destructor (Tucker), in annual pasture was documented and the relative numbers of individuals foraging on subterranean clover, Trifolium subterraneum (Leguminosae), capeweed, Arctotheca calendula (Compositae) and grasses (mainly Lolium rigidum (Gramineae)), estimated in winter and spring in south-western Australia. The main feature of H. destructor foraging behaviour was the presence of aggregations ranging in size from 3–36 individuals on the adaxial surfaces of the upper canopy of the pasture. Most aggregating individuals were feeding, while most solitary and paired individuals were searching. There was no evidence that individuals aggregated for reproductive behaviour; the adult sex ratio was similar to that of the population even though immatures were under-represented in aggregations. During winter the distribution of numbers of H. destructor on subclover, capeweed and grasses in the upper canopy of pasture was similar to the estimated ground cover of these plant species. However, individuals showed host-plant selection for subclover when feeding. During spring, when the pasture plants were flowering, there were more H. destructor in capeweed flowers than in aggregations on subclover foliage. The capeweed flowers were shown to enhance the rate of H. destructor reproduction in a laboratory experiment. Most H. destructor were on or near the soil surface, with 10% at any one time on the upper canopy of the pasture. H. destructor is polyphagous, and behaved in pasture as a selective opportunist feeder.



1995 ◽  
Vol 46 (5) ◽  
pp. 1091 ◽  
Author(s):  
TJ Ridsdill-Smith

Responses of redlegged earth mite (Halotydeus destructor) to seedlings of three resistant and four susceptible varieties of subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) were measured after 7 or 14 days in pot experiments in the glasshouse. With a single variety/pot, mites on resistant varieties (DGI007, EP145SubD and Rutherglen B) produced 45% of the progeny that were produced by mites on the susceptible varieties (89838G, Dalkeith, Junee and 70088B). Number of stages completed and survival were little affected by varieties. Feeding damage (silvering of cotyledons) on resistant varieties averaged 45% of that on susceptible varieties with a single varietylpot. H. destructor fed less on resistant varieties in choice than in single variety experiments. On Junee and 89838G seedlings, feeding damage was similar to that on other susceptible varieties, but there were about half as many H. destructor progeny as on Dalkeith and 70088B. Mites laid more eggs on soil away from Junee plants, compared to the other three susceptible varieties. Different factors adversely affected the number of progeny produced on resistant varieties and on Junee.



2000 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 361 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Chapman ◽  
T. J. Ridsdill-Smith ◽  
N. C. Turner

The impact of water stress and infestations of redlegged earth mite [Halotydeus destructor Tucker (Acarina : Penthaleidae)] on the early growth and botanical composition of a mixed subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L.) and capeweed (Arctotheca calendula Levyns) pasture was investigated in a controlled environment experiment. Water stress and redlegged earth mite infestations both significantly reduced herbage production from both species. The yield of the subterranean clover was suppressed less by water stress than that of the capeweed. The differing sensitivities of the two species to water stress were attributed to differences in seedling size and growth rates at the onset of the drought. Redlegged earth mites caused greater feeding damage on cotyledons of the subterranean clover than of the capeweed. Despite this, the mites had a greater deleterious impact on the growth of the capeweed, which was suppressed both in the presence and absence of water stress. Redlegged earth mites in the presence of water stress did not significantly affect the growth of the subterranean clover. Furthermore, in the absence of water stress, the growth of the subterranean clover was greater when mites were present than when absent. The greater sensitivity of the capeweed to the effects of feeding by the redlegged earth mites was attributed to the smaller size of its seedlings at the time the redlegged earth mites were introduced. The increase in growth of the subterranean clover following the introduction of redlegged earth mites is more likely due to a change in the competitive relationships between the two plant species than to any direct effect of the mites’ feeding. Our observations indicate that the presence of water stress and redlegged earth mites significantly affects the competitive interactions between seedlings of subterranean clover and capeweed.



1996 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Jiang ◽  
T.J. Ridsdill-Smith

AbstractResistance involving penetrability of cotyledons of subterranean clover Trifolium subterraneum (Leguminosae) by the redlegged earth mite, Halotydeus destructor Tucker, was examined in this study using several approaches. Values of penetrability, presented as mechanical strength measured with a penetrometer with a tubulated probe, of cotyledons tested 11–13 days after seeding, from nine varieties of two subspecies of subterranean clover (T. subterraneum subsp. yanninicum and subsp. brachycalicinum) were negatively correlated with feeding damage caused by H. destructor in both 3 h pairwise choice tests in a Petri dish with detached cotyledons, and in 2 week multiple choice tests in containers with seedlings. Simulation tests with different artificial membranes (Parafilm and Gladwrap) making up sachets, containing 5% glucose as a feeding stimulant, indicated that within 3 h H. destructor preferred membranes with lower strength. Field-collected young adults had significantly higher physical fitness to feed and/or gather on the artificial membrane sachet containing 5% glucose, than those from the laboratory culture, when the sachet was compared with cotyledons of either resistant (DGI007) or susceptible (Dalkeith) varieties in the choice tests. Electron microscopic observations of mite infested cotyledons of the resistant variety (DGI007) reveal that upper epidermal cell walls around penetration holes are bent inwards. Anticlinal cell walls of palisade cells appear buckled following attack by H. destructor. The results from these studies were taken as further evidence for the involvement of mechanical factors in antixenotic resistance of subterranean clover cotyledons to H. destructor.



1992 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
RF Brennan ◽  
M Grimm

The dry matter production (DM) and seed yield of subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L. cv. Daliak) were reduced by infestations of redlegged earth mite (Halotydeus destructor Tucker) and blue-green aphid (Acyrthosiphon kondoi Shinji) during spring growth, flowering and burr burial. The dominance of these pests varied with season. The effects of spraying with insecticides on the DM and seed yield responses to superphosphate and potassium chloride fertilisers were measured. Responses to superphosphate were described by Mitscherlich functions for each of 3 levels of potassium chloride, except for seed yields with pest sprays. At optimum levels of superphosphate and potassium chloride, controlling pests increased DM by up to 150% (from 4.37 to 6.52 t/ha). For all levels of superphosphate, spraying to control pests where no potassium chloride was applied significantly increased DM over that on unsprayed plots that were fertilised with potassium chloride. The maximum DM response to superphosphate application was achieved at 15-20 kg P/ha. With optimum superphosphate, the value for DM depended on the combination of spraying for pests and amount of potassium chloride applied, generating a series of Mitscherlich response curves for superphosphate application with differing maximum yields. With optimum superphosphate applied, the least DM recorded within a season was 3.47 t/ha (pests not sprayed, nil potassium chloride), and the most was 6.52 t/ha (pests sprayed, 120 kg potassium chloride/ha), an increase of about 180%. At optimum levels of superphosphate and potassium chloride, controlling pests increased seed yield by up to 380% (from 290 to 1100 kg/ha). With optimum superphosphate, seed yield within a season ranged from 210 (pests not sprayed, nil potassium chloride) to 1100 kg/ha (pests sprayed, 120 kg potassium chloride/ha), an increase of 524%. With pests sprayed, seed yield declined with superphosphate applications >20 kg P/ha; the relationship was best described by a quadratic function. With pests not sprayed, seed yield did not decline with increasing amounts of superphosphate, and the relationship fitted a Mitscherlich function.



1991 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 777
Author(s):  
MDA Bolland

The effect of superphosphate applications (0, 25, 50, 75, 100 and 125 kg P/ha to the soil surface) on the dry matter (DM) herbage production of dense swards of subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum cv. Junee) and yellow serradella (Ornithopus compressus cv. Tauro) was measured in a field experiment on deep, sandy soil in south-western Australia. The swards were defoliated with a reel mower at weekly intervals from 88 to 158 days after sowing, to a height of 2 cm for the first 9 cuts, 4 cm for the tenth cut and 5 cm for the eleventh cut. Yellow serradella was more productive than subterranean clover. Consequently, for the relationship between yield and the level of phosphorus (P) applied, yellow serradella supported larger maximum yields and required less P than subterranean clover, to produce the same DM herbage yield. Maximum yields of yellow serradella were 12-40% larger. To produce 70% of the maximum yield for yellow serradella at each harvest, yellow serradella required about 50% less P than subterranean clover. However, when yields were expressed as a percentage of the maximum yield measured for each species at each harvest, the relationship between yield and the level of P applied was similar for both species, and they had similar P requirements.



1997 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 683 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. S. Dear ◽  
P. S. Cocks

Subterranean clover seedling numbers and growth in swards containing 1 of 5 perennial pasture species [phalaris (Phalaris aquatica) cv. Sirolan, cocksfoot (Dactylis glomerata) cv. Currie, lucerne (Medicago sativa) cv. Aquarius, wallaby grass (Danthonia richardsonii) cv. Taranna, and lovegrass (Eragrostis curvula) cv. Consol] were compared with those in typical annual pastures and pure clover swards in the wheatbelt of eastern Australia. Presence of a perennial species or the volunteer annual grass (Eragrostis cilianensis) increased the rate of drying of the soil surface (0–5 cm) after late February and May rain, compared with subterranean clover swards. Perennials differed in the rate they dried the soil surface, with the more summer-active lucerne and consul lovegrass drying the profile more rapidly than phalaris. The amount of water in the surface 5 cm, 6 days after the rainfall event on 27–28 February, was strongly negatively correlated (r = –0·75, P < 0·01) with the amount of green perennial biomass, but not related to standing dead material or surface residues. Where perennials were present, a smaller proportion (2–4%) of the clover seed pool produced seedlings in response to late summer rain, compared with pure clover swards (18%). A higher proportion of the seed pool produced seedlings (19–36%) following rain in late autumn but there was no difference between species. The more summer-active perennials (cocksfoot, danthonia, and lucerne) markedly depressed the survival of emerged clover seedlings following both germinations. Of the seedlings that emerged in early March, the proportion remaining by 29 March was 57% in phalaris, 21% in lucerne, 13% in danthonia, and 1% in cocksfoot, compared with a 78% increase in seedlings in pure subterranean clover swards. By 15 May, all perennials had <2 clover seedlings/m2 surviving, compared with 37 in the annual pasture and 964 plants/m2 in pure subterranean clover. Following the May germination, the highest proportion of emerged seedlings surviving until 29 May was in the phalaris swards (40%) and least in the cocksfoot and danthonia swards (2–4%). Presence of a perennial or annual grass decreased (P < 0·05) relative water content of clover seedlings on 15 March from 74% in pure clover swards, to 48% in annual pasture, 34% in phalaris, and 29% in lucerne swards. Clover seedlings growing in pure subterranean swards on 15 March (17 days after germinating rain) were 4 times larger than those in lucerne and twice as large as those in either phalaris or annual pasture. Seed size did not differ between treatments, but available mineral soil nitrogen was significantly higher (P < 0·001) in pure subterranean clover swards (32 mg N/g) compared with perennials (3–13 mg N/g). Strategies such as heavy grazing in late summer to reduce green biomass of the perennials or sowing the perennials at lower densities may reduce the adverse effects that perennials have on subterranean clover seedlings in these drier environments.



1980 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 297 ◽  
Author(s):  
AW Kellock ◽  
LL Stubbs ◽  
DG Parbery

Fusarium avenaceurn (Corda ex Fr.) Sacc. was shown for the first time to be carried in the hilum of subterranean clover (Trifolium Subterraneum L.) seed. Scanning electron microscopy and thin-section techniques showed that the fungus occurred only as dormant mycelium in parenchyma cells of funicle scar tissue. It emerged from these tissues after a 12 h incubation at 24�C and in 48 h penetrated internal parts of the seed through the hilum fissure. After 21 days on moist blotting paper, seedlings grown from infected seed developed lesions on their roots similar to those of root-rot of subterranean clover in the field. Fusarium spp. were also detected in the hilum of seeds of white (T. repens L.) and strawberry (T. fragiferum L.) clover and barrel medic (M. truncatula L.). It was demonstrated experimentally that all parts of the burr, incl~tding the funicle, became infected with F. avenaceuni when subterranean clover plants grown from healthy seed in pasteurized soil buried their burrs in soil inoculated with the fungus. Use of optical brighteners failed to trace seed infection because the compounds, although absorbed by the pathogen in culture, were not translocated.



1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Broderick ◽  
Christopher Pittock ◽  
Tony Arioli ◽  
Ernest H. Creaser ◽  
Jeremy J. Weinman ◽  
...  

One of the chief predators of subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) pastures is redlegged earth mite (Halotydeus destructor; RLEM). Subterranean clover pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins induced by RLEM attack and ethephon treatment were surveyed, and PR proteins with peroxidase, β-1,3-glucanase and chitinase activities were detected. A protein co-migrating with a chitinase activity, induced by RLEM predation and treatment with ethephon, was isolated. It was purified and the N-terminal amino acid sequence determined. Using a degenerate oligonucleotide primer designed from this sequence, a corresponding cDNA fragment was amplified by reverse transcriptase-PCR, then cloned, and used as a probe to screen a subterranean clover cv. Karridale genomic library. The cDNA and a 97% homologous genomic clone were sequenced and the deduced amino acid sequence revealed an open reading frame of 157 amino acids capable of encoding a peptide of 16 478 Da. Significant homology (80%) was found between this protein and an abscisic acid (ABA)-responsive protein from Pisum sativum of unknown function which is an intracellular pathogenesis-related (IPR) protein. The gene encoding this protein also has homology to pea ‘disease response resistance genes’ and to proteins from other plant species in the PR-10 family. The induced protein was designated TsPR-10a due to its homology to other PR-10 proteins. Genomic Southern analysis indicates that the gene encoding this protein, designated Ypr10a, is a member of a multigene family with at least three members. Northern blot analysis indicates that the subterranean clover Ypr10a mRNA, or homologous transcript, level is strongly induced by ethephon treatment in both root and aerial tissues of 3 week old plants. The rapid induction kinetics of Ypr10a mRNA under ethephon treatment, its correlation with a putative chitinase activity, and homology to other PR-protein genes, suggests a pathogenesis-related role for TsPR-10a protein in subterranean clover.



1933 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 351-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Davidson ◽  
D. C. Swan

In our investigations on Smynthurus viridis, L., a study has been made of the population of this species, in an area of lucerne, at intervals of three and four days throughout the season.The density of the population of the species in a favourable pasture is markedly affected by the relative abundance of certain food-plants, especially leguminous species and particularly clovers such as subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum) and lucerne (Medicago sativa).The activity of the insect is intimately associated with the moisture of its environment, and the moisture content of the surface soil is one of the most important factors affecting the environmental conditions.Considering the habits of the insect, it was felt that the sweeping method would not give a reliable record of the total population in a given area of pasture. A sample obtained by sweeping with a net does not include individuals on or near to the surface of the soil. The relative proportion of individuals situated on or near the soil surface and those situated further up the plants varies considerably from time to time, according to the meteorological conditions, the growth of the herbage and the moisture content of the surface soil. It was necessary therefore to devise a simple method by means of which a more accurate record of the total population in a given area could be obtained.



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