Herbivory meets fungivory: insect herbivores feed on plant pathogenic fungi for their own benefit

  • Franziska Eberl (Creator)
  • Maite Fernandez de Bobadilla (Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology) (Creator)
  • Almuth Hammerbacher (Creator)
  • Michael Reichelt (Creator)
  • Jonathan Gershenzon (Creator)
  • Sybille B. Unsicker (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Plants are regularly colonized by fungi and bacteria, but plant-inhabiting microbes are rarely considered in studies on plant-herbivore interactions. Here we show that young gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) caterpillars prefer to feed on black poplar (Populus nigra) foliage infected by the rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina instead of uninfected control foliage, and selectively consume fungal spores. This consumption, also observed in a related lepidopteran species, is stimulated by the sugar alcohol mannitol, found in much higher concentration in fungal tissue and infected leaves than uninfected plant foliage. Gypsy moth larvae developed more rapidly on rust-infected leaves, which cannot be attributed to mannitol but rather to greater levels of total nitrogen, essential amino acids and B vitamins in fungal tissue and fungus-infected leaves. Herbivore consumption of fungi and other microbes may be much more widespread than commonly believed with important consequences for the ecology and evolution of plant-herbivore interactions.
Date made available19 Mar 2021
PublisherMax Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology

Keywords

  • insect herbivores
  • Lymantria dispar
  • Populus nigra

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