scholarly journals Plant Pathogen Invasion Modifies the Eco-Evolutionary Host Plant Interactions of an Endangered Checkerspot Butterfly

Insects ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 246
Author(s):  
Paul M. Severns ◽  
Melinda Guzman-Martinez

New plant pathogen invasions typified by cryptic disease symptoms or those appearing sporadically in time and patchily in space, might go largely unnoticed and not taken seriously by ecologists. We present evidence that the recent invasion of Pyrenopeziza plantaginis (Dermateaceae) into the Pacific Northwest USA, which causes foliar necrosis in the fall and winter on Plantago lanceolata (plantain), the primary (non-native) foodplant for six of the eight extant Taylor’s checkerspot butterfly populations (Euphydryas editha taylori, endangered species), has altered eco-evolutionary foodplant interactions to a degree that threatens butterfly populations with extinction. Patterns of butterfly, larval food plant, and P. plantaginis disease development suggested the ancestral relationship was a two-foodplant system, with perennial Castilleja spp. supporting oviposition and pre-diapause larvae, and the annual Collinsia parviflora supporting post-diapause larvae. Plantain, in the absence of P. plantaginis disease, provided larval food resources throughout all butterfly life stages and may explain plantain’s initial adoption by Taylor’s checkerspot. However, in the presence of severe P. plantaginis disease, plantain-dependent butterfly populations experience a six-week period in the winter where post-diapause larvae lack essential plantain resources. Only C. parviflora, which is rare and competitively inferior under present habitat conditions, can fulfill the post-diapause larval feeding requirements in the presence of severe P. plantaginis disease. However, a germination timing experiment suggested C. parviflora to be suitably timed for only Washington Taylor’s checkerspot populations. The recent invasion by P. plantaginis appears to have rendered the ancestrally adaptive acquisition of plantain by Taylor’s checkerspot an unreliable, maladaptive foodplant interaction.

2007 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 54
Author(s):  
R. Sampangi ◽  
D. A. Glawe ◽  
S. K. Mohan

This report documents the first record of Leveillula taurica on a species of Cleome (spiderflower) in North America. The introduced plant pathogen Leveillula taurica (Lév.) G. Arnaud (anamorph = Oidiopsis sicula Scalia) occurs on a range of hosts in the Pacific Northwest (PNW), including onion and was identified infecting Cleome hassleriana Chod. (common name: pink queen, family: Capparaceae). Accepted for publication 29 December 2007. Published 19 February 2007.


1977 ◽  
Vol 55 (8) ◽  
pp. 1019-1027 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Andrews

Seaweeds that displayed disease symptoms were collected intertidally and subtidally from coastal Washington and British Columbia. A red rot of Fucus, characterized by the progressive reddish discoloration and ultimate disintegration of host tissue, was observed frequently. The fungus Cephalosporium was isolated consistently from diseased plants. Extensive galls, from 1 to 50 mm in size, on stipes of Laminaria, Nereocystis, and Macrocystis, were associated invariably with a filamentous, endophytic, and presumably parasitic Streblonema-like alga. A bacterium, identified tentatively as Acinetobacter, was isolated from infected Nereocystis in the laboratory and shown to be pathogenic by fulfillment of Koch's Postulates. Symptoms or signs of this white rot disease were restricted to exposed, floating stipes and pneumatocysts which collapsed, became flaccid, and were covered with a white bacterial slime. Attempts to demonstrate causality with the putative pathogens causing red rot and galls, respectively, were unsuccessful. Nematodes of the genera Paralinhomeous and Monhystera were isolated from Fucus and Laminaria, respectively, but appear to be free-living and not parasitic.


2019 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 452
Author(s):  
Margaret H. Massie ◽  
Todd M. Wilson ◽  
Anita T. Morzillo ◽  
Emilie B. Henderson

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob L. Strunk ◽  
Constance A. Harrington ◽  
Leslie C. Brodie ◽  
Janet S. Prevéy

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