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BIOLOGICAL CONTROL OF THE BLACK CUTWORM, <em>AGROTIS IPSILON</em> (LEPIDOPTERA: NOCTUIDAE), AND ENDOPHYTE MEDIATED TRITROPHIC INTERACTIONS IN TURFGRASSBixby-Brosi, Andrea Jeanne 01 January 2011 (has links)
Components of successful pest management programs must be complementary and not antagonistic. This project examined interactions between natural enemies of the black cutworm, Agrotis ipsilon (Hufnagel), an important turfgrass pest, and host plant resistance by endophytic grass.
Agrotis ipsilon nucleopolyhedrovirus (AgipMNPV) was examined as a bio-insecticide for controlling A. ipsilon in turfgrass. Fresh (1-week-old) AgipMNPV residues killed 76−86% of neonates hatching from eggs on golf course tees, however, residual control of implanted larvae lasted no more than a few weeks. Combinations of AgipMNPV with adjuvants, such as optical brightener and lignin, failed to accelerate or extend efficacy of the virus. AgipMNPV seems better suited for targeted control of early instars than for season-long control. Several applications per growing season would likely be needed to maintain high enough titers on turfgrass to effectively control cutworms.
The addition of a chitin synthesis inhibiting turfgrass fungicide failed to synergize AgipMNPV infectivity to A. ipsilon. Choice tests revealed the fungicide residues to be a mild feeding deterrent, the likely cause of slightly reduced mortality from virus infection seen in field trials. Combination applications in turfgrass might interfere with larval ingestion of a lethal virus dose, resulting in prolonged feeding in the field.
I examined how feeding on perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) with or without Neotyphodium lolii, its alkaloid-producing fungal endophyte, affects susceptibility of A. ipsilon to AgipMNPV. Feeding on endophytic grass neither compromises nor synergizes infectivity of AgipMNPV in the cutworm midgut. However, reduced consumption or avoidance of less-palatable endophytic grass could decrease ingestion of virus and rates of subsequent mortality in the field.
Host feeding on endophytic grass had differing effects on the tachinid fly, Linnaemya comta, a fast-developing solitary parasitoid, and the encyrtid wasp, Copidosoma bakeri, a slow-developing gregarious parasitoid. L. comta development did not appear to be affected when its host fed on endophytic grass; in contrast, C. bakeri suffered negative fitness effects. These results suggest that parasitoid life strategy and taxonomy play a role in endophyte mediated tritrophic interactions.
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Plant Fungal Endosymbionts Alter Host-Parasite Relationships Between Generalist Herbivores (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) and An Entomopathogenic NematodeKunkel, Brian A. 19 March 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Influence de l'environnement sur l'évolution des génomes de virus / Influence of the environment on the evolution of virus genomesChateigner, Aurélien 12 December 2014 (has links)
Le but de cette thèse fut d’étudier l’influence de l’environnement sur l’évolution des génomes de baculovirus. Nous avons d’abord caractérisé génétiquement la population naturelle d’AcMNPV par séquençage haut-débit et établi par des bioessais la sensibilité de 4 espèces hôtes au virus. Ensuite, une évolution expérimentale de 10 cycles fut mise en place sur les 4 espèces hôtes, à partir d’une population naturelle d’AcMNPV. Elle nous a permis de caractériser phénotypiquement et génotypiquement les lignées de 10ème génération. Cette expérience nous a montré des trade-off de virulence pour chaque lignée : pour augmenter leur virulence pour l’hôte sur lequel elles ont évolué, les lignées ont perdu en potentiel adaptatif généraliste. De plus, la diversité intra-populationnelle a diminué pour toutes les lignées en fonction de la sensibilité des hôtes. Enfin, en corrélant tous ces résultats nous avons mis en évidence des positions spécifiques du génome, impliquées dans l’adaptation à l’hôte. / The purpose of this thesis was to study the influence of the environment on the evolution of baculovirus genomes. We first genetically characterised the AcMNPV natural population by high-throughput sequencing and established the susceptibility of 4 hosts to the virus by bioassays. Then, the AcMNPV natural population was subjected to experimental evolution on the 4 host species for 10 cycles. The 10th generation of the evolved viral lines were then phenotypically and genotypically characterised. This experiment showed a virulence trade-off for each line: to increase their virulence to the host on which they evolved, the lines have lost generalist adaptive potential. Furthermore, intra-population diversity decreased for all the lines regardless of host susceptibility. Lastly, by correlating all these results we found specific genome positions involved in host adaptation.
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