Replacement of a dominant viral pathogen by a fungal pathogen does not alter the collapse of a regional forest insect outbreak.

Oecologia

Department of Environmental Sciences, Blandy Experimental Farm, University of Virginia, Boyce, VA, 22620, USA.

Published: March 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Natural enemies and environmental factors, including precipitation, significantly influence the population cycles of forest-defoliating insects like the gypsy moth.
  • The study showed that the fungal pathogen Entomophaga maimaiga has become the leading cause of mortality in gypsy moths in the US mid-Atlantic, surpassing the previously dominant virus, LdNPV.
  • Analysis revealed a negative spatial association between fungal and parasitoid mortality agents, suggesting competition, while precipitation was found to significantly affect the prevalence of both fungal and viral pathogens.

Article Abstract

Natural enemies and environmental factors likely both influence the population cycles of many forest-defoliating insect species. Previous work suggests precipitation influences the spatiotemporal patterns of gypsy moth outbreaks in North America, and it has been hypothesized that precipitation could act indirectly through effects on pathogens. We investigated the potential role of climatic and environmental factors in driving pathogen epizootics and parasitism at 57 sites over an area of ≈72,300 km(2) in four US mid-Atlantic states during the final year (2009) of a gypsy moth outbreak. Prior work has largely reported that the Lymantria dispar nucleopolyhedrovirus (LdNPV) was the principal mortality agent responsible for regional collapses of gypsy moth outbreaks. However, in the gypsy moth outbreak-prone US mid-Atlantic region, the fungal pathogen Entomophaga maimaiga has replaced the virus as the dominant source of mortality in dense host populations. The severity of the gypsy moth population crash, measured as the decline in egg mass densities from 2009 to 2010, tended to increase with the prevalence of E. maimaiga and larval parasitoids, but not LdNPV. A significantly negative spatial association was detected between rates of fungal mortality and parasitism, potentially indicating displacement of parasitoids by E. maimaiga. Fungal, viral, and parasitoid mortality agents differed in their associations with local abiotic and biotic conditions, but precipitation significantly influenced both fungal and viral prevalence. This study provides the first spatially robust evidence of the dominance of E. maimaiga during the collapse of a gypsy moth outbreak and highlights the important role played by microclimatic conditions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-014-3164-7DOI Listing

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