Fungal community associated with adults of the chestnut gall wasp Dryocosmus kuriphilus after emergence from galls: taxonomy and functional ecology

Publication date: Available online 4 October 2019Source: Fungal BiologyAuthor(s): Carmen Morales-Rodriguez, Ivano Sferrazza, MariaPia Aleandri, Matteo Dalla Valle, Tommaso Mazzetto, Stefano Speranza, Mario Contarini, Andrea VanniniAbstractThe diversity of the fungal community associated with adults of Dryocosmus kuriphilus following emergence was examined using HTS analysis. Ascomycota dominated the fungal core-biome community. The functional guilds of the 90 taxa forming the core-biome were assessed, demonstrating three main groups: saprotrophs, plant pathogens and entomopathogens. Twenty-nine OTUs out of 90 were resolved to species level identifying 26 different fungal species. Among these species, many were cosmopolitan or previously recorded in Europe. Ten taxa were previously recorded on chestnut, including some recognized plant pathogens associated with foliage and green tissues such as Epicoccum nigrum, Gnomoniopsis castanea, Colletotrichum acutatum, Stromatoseptoria castaneicola, Ramularia endophylla. Beauveria bassiana; within the core microbiome, Fusarium larvarum represented the most abundant entomopathogenic species. Some of these species are known to impact directly or indirectly the vitality of the insects in the galls. The chestnut blight pathogen, Cryphonectria parasitica, was never found associated with D. kuriphilus. Based on the present study, an active role for D. kuriphilus as a vector of chestnut fungal endophyte/pathogens cannot be demonstrated but neit...
Source: Fungal Biology - Category: Biology Source Type: research
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