Title: Weevil borne microbes contribute as much to the reduction of photosynthesis in water hyacinth as does herbivory

Abstract: Arthropods released for weed biocontrol can have effects other than simply removing biomass and frequently decrease photosynthetic rate more than can be attributed to the mere loss of photosynthetic surface area. Some of this effect may result because biological control agents facilitate the transfer and ingress of deleterious microbes into plant tissues on which they feed. We evaluated this facilitation effect using water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) and a weevil (Neochetina eichhorniae) and compared the reductions in photosynthetic rates between leaves subject to herbivory by adult weevils sterilized with 3.5% chlorine bleach, to those that were unsterilized. The results showed that weevils carried both fungi and bacteria, transferred these to leaves on which they fed, and that microbes and biomass removal contributed almost equally to the 37% decrease in photosynthetic productivity. Hence, maximising the effectiveness of using arthropods that damage leaf surfaces for biocontrol requires the presence of microorganisms that are deleterious to plants. [Nic Venter, Martin P. Hill, Sarah-Leigh Hutchinson & Brad S. Ripley (2012). Weevil borne microbes contribute as much to the reduction of photosynthesis in water hyacinth as does herbivory. Biological Control, online 5 Nov.] Comment

Keywords: Photosynthesis; Microbes; Hosts; Water hyacinth; Weevil; Herbivory

Original source



Article: WeedsNews4092 (permalink)
Categories: :WeedsNews:biological control, :WeedsNews:aquatic weeds, :WeedsNews:research alert
Date: 4 December 2012; 2:14:40 PM AEDT

Author Name: David Low
Author ID: adminDavid