Abstract

In conifers, attacks by bark beetles and associated pathogenic fungi cause an induced wound response, which is characterized by accumulation of antifungal compounds and morphological changes that aid wound healing. In this article the stilbene and terpene concentrations of Norway spruce phloem were monitored as symptoms of induced wound responses in relation to changed nutrient conditions caused by fertilization. Plots of mature Norway spruce were fertilized with N, P or NPK. One year after fertilization the trees were artificially infected with Ceratocystis polonica, a pathogenic fungus associated with the bark beetle Ips typographus. The response of stilbenes to fungal inoculation was mainly qualitative. The concentration of stilbene glycosides in the phloem decreased, and in the immediate vicinity of the site of fungal inoculation, stilbene glycosides were less frequent than in mechanically wounded or unwounded phloem. Corresponding stilbene aglycones were most frequent inside the reaction lesion. The concentration of total stilbene aglycones near the inoculation site was significantly lower in N-fertilized trees than in unfertilized trees. Fungal inoculation caused a strong quantitative response in terpenes. The total terpene concentration of the phloem increased significantly, to almost 100 times greater near the inoculation site compared to the constitutive values. N fertilization significantly reduced the total terpene and total stilbene aglycone concentrations near the inoculation sites. Thus, N fertilization may reduce the ability of Norway spruce to defend itself against fungal pathogens.

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