Abstract

Several fungal plant pathogens induce ‘pseudoflowers’ on their hosts to facilitate insect-mediated transmission of gametes and spores. When spores must be transmitted to host flowers to complete the fungal life cycle, we predict that pseudoflowers should evolve traits that mimic flowers and attract the most effective vectors in the flower-visiting community. We quantified insect visitation to flowers, healthy leaves and leaves infected with Monilinia vaccinii-corymbosi (Mvc), the causative agent of mummy berry disease of blueberry. We developed a nested PCR assay for detecting Mvc spores on bees, flies and other potential insect vectors. We also collected volatiles from blueberry flowers, healthy leaves and leaves infected with Mvc, and experimentally manipulated specific pathogen-induced volatiles to assess attractiveness to potential vectors. Bees and flies accounted for the majority of contacts with flowers, leaves infected with Mvc and healthy leaves. Flowers were contacted most often, while there was no difference between bee or fly contacts with healthy and infected leaves. While bees contacted flowers more often than flies, flies contacted infected leaves more often than bees. Bees were more likely to have Mvc spores on their bodies than flies, suggesting that bees may be more effective vectors than flies for transmitting Mvc spores to flowers. Leaves infected with Mvc had volatile profiles distinct from healthy leaves but similar to flowers. Two volatiles produced by flowers and infected leaves, cinnamyl alcohol and cinnamic aldehyde, were attractive to bees, while no volatiles manipulated were attractive to flies or any other insects. These results suggest that Mvc infection of leaves induces mimicry of floral volatiles, and that transmission occurs primarily via bees, which had the highest likelihood of carrying Mvc spores and visited flowers most frequently.

Highlights

  • Plant pathogens can induce changes in their hosts, influencing the frequency and nature of interactions with animal vectors [1]

  • Insect visitation to flowers and leaves infected with Monilinia vaccinii-corymbosi (Mvc)

  • In 2008 and 2009, video observations of blueberry flowers, healthy leaves (2008 only) and leaves infected with Monilinia vaccinii-corymbosi (Mvc) were made during May and June at three mature blueberry plantings in southwest Michigan with a history of mummy berry disease

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Summary

Introduction

Plant pathogens can induce changes in their hosts, influencing the frequency and nature of interactions with animal vectors [1]. Pollinator-vectored plant pathogens can manipulate their hosts in two ways They can induce changes in host floral traits to increase chances of transmission. A more aggressive tactic used by some fungal plant pathogens involves the production of ‘pseudoflowers’ from host plant vegetative tissue. In such cases, plants become infected during vegetative growth and produce pathogen-induced flower-like structures in place of or during host flowering. Plants become infected during vegetative growth and produce pathogen-induced flower-like structures in place of or during host flowering Insects visit these structures and facilitate either sexual outcrossing of the fungus by visiting other pseudoflowers [12,13,14,15,16,17,18], or transmission of infective spores to flowers of the host plant [19,20,21]

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