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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/7571
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Title: | Bursaphelenchus pinophilus Brzeski & Baujard, 1997 (Nematoda: Parasitaphelenchinae) associated with nematangia on Pityogenes bidentatus (Herbst, 1783) (Coleoptera: Scolytinae), from the Czech Republic |
Authors: | C ERMÁK, Václav VIEIRA, Paulo GAAR, Vladimír ˇC UDEJKOVÁ, Mária FOIT, Jiˇrí ŠIROKÁ, Kateˇrina Mota, Manuel |
Keywords: | bark beetle Bursaphelenchus sexdentati group new host Pinus sylvestris |
Issue Date: | 2012 |
Abstract: | The occurrence of Bursaphelenchus species in the
Czech Republic is poorly known, the first report of the
genus being made by Kubátová et al. (2000) who reported
the association of B. eremus with the hyphomycetous
microfungus, Esteya vermicola, and the bark beetle,
Scolytus intricatus, collected from Quercus robur, in central
Bohemia. To date, four other species have been reported
from the country, namely B. fungivorus (Braasch
et al., 2002), B. hofmanni (see Braasch, 2001), B. mucronatus
(see Braasch, 2001) and B. vallesianus (Gaar et
al., 2006). More recently, a survey for Bursaphelenchus
species associated with bark- and wood-boring insects in
the Czech Republic identified B. pinophilus Brzeski &
Baujard, 1997 from the Moravia region. Although this
represents a new country record, it was also associated
with nematangia on the hind wings of a new insect vector.
A total of 404 bark- and wood-boring insects were collected
from declining or symptomatic trees and screened
for the presence of Bursaphelenchus. Bark and longhorn
beetles were captured manually after debarking parts
of the trunk displaying symptoms of insect attacks.
Longhorn beetle larvae were also collected together with
logs cut from the trunk. Logs were kept at room temperature
in the laboratory until insect emergence. Each
adult insect was individually dissected in water and examined
for nematodes. All nematodes resembling dauer juveniles
of Bursaphelenchus were collected and identified
by molecular characterisation using a region of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) containing the internal transcribed spacer
regions ITS1 and ITS2. ITS-RFLP analyses using five restriction
enzymes (AluI, HaeIII, HinfI, MspI, RsaI) were
performed to generate the species-specific profile according
to Burgermeister et al. (2009). Species identification
was also confirmed by morphological data after culture of
the dauers on Botrytis cinerea Pers. ex Ft., growing in 5%
malt extract agar.
During this survey, only species belonging to the Curculionidae,
subfamily Scolytinae, revealed the presence
of nematodes belonging to Bursaphelenchus. Dauers of
this genus were found aggregated under the elytra in nematangia
formed at the root of the hind wings (Fig. 1).
The dauers were identified from 12 individuals of Pityogenes
bidentatus (Herbst, 1783) (Coleoptera: Scolytinae)
collected under the bark of Pinus sylvestris trunks. Each
insect carried ca 10-100 dauers. The ITS-RFLP patterns
of the dauers so obtained confirmed the identification of
B. pinophilus associated with this insect species.
Bursaphelenchus pinophilus has been found mainly in
Europe and has been reported from various countries such
as Poland (Brzeski & Baujard, 1997), Germany (Braasch,
2001), and Portugal (Penas et al., 2007). The recent detection
of this species associated with dead P. koraiensis in
Korea (Han et al., 2009) expands its geographical distribution
and potential importance. It has been found associated
only with Pinus species, but very little is known
about the insect vector. The bark beetle, Hylurgus ligniperda,
was initially suggested as the insect vector by Pe-nas et al. (2006), although the nematode associated with
this insect was later reclassified as B. sexdentati by morphological
and molecular analysis (Penas et al., 2007).
According to the literature, P. bidentatus has been cited
as a vector of Ektaphelenchus sp. (Kakuliya, 1966) in
Georgia, and an unidentified nematode species in Spain
(Roberston et al., 2008). Interestingly, B. pinophilus was
found in the nematangia formed at the root of the hind
wings of P. bidentatus. Although this phenomenon is not
so common in other Bursaphelenchus species, B. rufipennis
has been found recently in such a structure on the hind
wings of the insect Dendroctonus rufipennis (Kanzaki et
al., 2008). Although other nematode species (e.g., Ektaphelenchus
spp.) are frequently found associated within
the same nematangia (see Kanzaki et al., 2008), in this
particular case, only dauers of B. pinophilus were identified.
The association between B. pinophilus and P. bidentatus
represents the first report of this biological association
and the association with the Scolytinae strengthens
the tight and specific links between this group of Bursaphelenchus
species and members of the Scolytinae (Ryss
et al., 2005). |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/7571 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica BIO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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