Quantifying horizontal transmission of Nosema lymantriae, a microsporidian pathogen of the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar (Lep., Lymantriidae) in field cage studies |
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Authors: | Hoch Gernot D'Amico Vincent Solter Leellen F Zubrik Milan McManus Michael L |
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Affiliation: | a BOKU University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Hasenauerstrasse 38, A-1190, Vienna, Austria b US Forest Service, University of Delaware, Department of Entomology, 531 South College Avenue, Townsend Hall, Newark, DE 19716, USA c Illinois Natural History Survey, 1816 S. Oak Street, Champaign, IL 61820, USA d Forest Research Institute Zvolen, T.G. Masaryka 22, 96092 Zvolen, Slovakia e US Forest Service, 51 Mill Pond Road, Hamden, CT 06514, USA |
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Abstract: | Nosema lymantriae is a microsporidian pathogen of the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar that has been documented to be at least partially responsible for the collapse of L. dispar outbreak populations in Europe. To quantify horizontal transmission of this pathogen under field conditions we performed caged-tree experiments that varied (1) the density of the pathogen through the introduction of laboratory-infected larvae, and (2) the total time that susceptible (test) larvae were exposed to these infected larvae. The time frame of the experiments extended from the early phase of colonization of the target tissues by the microsporidium to the onset of pathogen-induced mortality or pupation of test larvae. Upon termination of each experiment, the prevalence of infection in test larvae was evaluated. In the experiments performed over a range of pathogen densities, infection of test larvae increased with increasing density of inoculated larvae, from 14.2 ± 3.5% at density of 10 inoculated per 100 larvae to 36.7 ± 5.7% at 30 inoculated per 100 larvae. At higher densities, percent infection in test larvae appeared to level off (35.7 ± 5.5% at 50 inoculated per 100 larvae). When larval exposure to the pathogen was varied, transmission of N. lymantriae did not occur within the first 15 d post-inoculation (dpi) (11 d post-exposure of test larvae to inoculated larvae). We found the first infected test larvae in samples taken 20 dpi (16 d post-exposure). Transmission increased over time; in the cages sampled 25 dpi (21 d post-exposure), Nosema prevalence in test larvae ranged from 20.6% to 39.2%. |
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Keywords: | Nosema lymantriae Lymantria dispar Microsporidia Biological control Horizontal transmission Disease dynamics |
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