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Sitobion avenae alatae infected by Pandora neoaphidis: their flight ability, post-flight colonization, and mycosis transmission to progeny colonies
Authors:Chen Chun  Feng Ming-Guang
Institution:Institute of Microbiology, College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, PR China.
Abstract:Epizootics caused by the obligate Entomophthorales pathogen Pandora neoaphidis may result from more than one possible means of fungal dissemination among host aphids, but we hypothesize that wide dispersal of the fungus is most likely to be associated with the flight behavior of migratory alates. We tested this hypothesis in a simulation experiment by assessing the flight capability of Sitobion avenae alates infected with P. neoaphidis and the potential of their post-flight survival, colonization, and mycosis transmission to progeny. A total of 281 alates were inoculated with P. neoaphidis, individually flown for up to 5h and 9km in a computer-monitored flight mill system and then reared for 10 days on wheat seedlings. The infected alates were capable of surviving on average for 2.9 days (range 1-7 days) and leaving 4.6 nymphs prior to deaths. Transmission of fungal infection within progeny colonies occurred after the mother alates died from P. neoaphidis mycosis. The level of contagious infection among the nymphs reached up to 16.8% within 7 days but varied with the survival time of the infected mother alates after flight. Based on stepwise polynomial regression analysis, progeny colony size was highly correlated with the interactions of flight time with both post-flight survival time and the number of nymphs left per alate before death (r2 = 0.997). Progeny mortality on day 5 after colonization was inversely correlated with post-flight survival time (r2 = 0.949) whereas infection on day 7 was correlated with flight distance and an interaction of post-flight survival time with fecundity of the infected alates (r2 = 0.970). Progeny mortality observed on day 10 was merely correlated to mortality observed on day 5 (r2 = 0.946). These results indicate a successful transmission of alate-borne P. neoaphidis to progeny colonies and further support our hypothesis on the means of primary dispersal of aphid epizootics by migratory alates in a geographically wide range.
Keywords:Entomophthorales  Aphididae  Pandora neoaphidis  Sitobion avenae  Infected alates  Flight ability  Post-flight colonization  Within-colony mycosis transmission
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