ENGRAVER BEETLES (SCOLYTIDAE: IPS SPECIES) AS VECTORS OF THE PITCH CANKER FUNGUS, FUSARIUM SUBGLUTINANS
- 1 December 1991
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Canadian Entomologist
- Vol. 123 (6) , 1355-1367
- https://doi.org/10.4039/ent1231355-6
Abstract
Ips mexicanus (Hopkins) and I. paraconfusus Lanier can transmit a frugal pathogen that causes pitch canker [Fusarium subglutinans (Wollenw, and Reink.) Nelson, Toussoun, andMarasas], a disease recently identified in Monterey pines (Pirns radiata D. Don) in California. In Santa Cruz County, F. subglutinans was recovered from Ips spp. that emerged from pitch canker-in fee ted P. radiata and were captured in multiple-funnel traps baited with racemic Ips spp. pheromones. Ips paraconfusus adults experimentally contaminated with propagules of the fungus transmitted it to seedlings and mature pines. Field transmission was demonstrated when cankers were produced following pheromone-induced beetle attacks on pines. Ips spp. inoculated F. subglutinans into pine slash, thus creating reservoirs of this fungus. Larvae, pupae, and young adults acquired the fungus when their parents introduced it into logs. Ips spp. progeny production and development were not significantly altered by the fungus. In proximity to other bark beetle-associated fungi, growth of F. subglutinans was reduced and patchy. A new association may be developing among native Ips spp. and F. subglutinans.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tree Disease ConceptsMycologia, 1991
- Pitch Canker Disease in California: Pathogenicity, Distribution, and Canker Development on Monterey Pine (Pinus radiata)Plant Disease, 1991
- DISTRIBUTION AND ABUNDANCE OF ENGRAVER BEETLES (SCOLYTIDAE: IPS SPECIES) ON MONTEREY PINES INFECTED WITH PITCH CANKERThe Canadian Entomologist, 1990
- China and the origins of Dutch elm disease: an appraisalPlant Pathology, 1990
- Pitch Canker of Pinus luchuensis in JapanPlant Disease, 1990
- Pollen in Laminated Sediments Provides Evidence For a Mid-Holocene Forest Pathogen OutbreakEcology, 1986
- A MULTIPLE FUNNEL TRAP FOR SCOLYTID BEETLES (COLEOPTERA)The Canadian Entomologist, 1983
- FEEDING AND BORING BEHAVIOR OF THE BARK BEETLEIPS PARACONFUSUS(COLEOPTERA: SCOLYTIDAE) ON THE BARK OF A HOST AND NON-HOST TREE SPECIESThe Canadian Entomologist, 1980
- Fungal-Insect Mutualism in Trees and TimberAnnual Review of Entomology, 1967
- Insect Transmission of Plant DiseasesMycologia, 1942