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Biodiversity and
Plant Pathogens
and Conservation
by Dr. David Ingram
Participate in an
Ecological
Discussion on
Plant Pathogen Conservation
British Mycological
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Policy
On Conservation
of Fungi
Six Reasons
to
Value the Biodiversity
of the Earth
Vole Power:
Herbivores Prefer
Diseased Plants
A Study of Two
Oak Species and
Powdery Mildew
What is
Plant Pathology?
Related Reading:
Potato Late Blight and
the Irish
Potato Famine
Why Europeans
Drink Tea
Meltdown for
Chocoholics
Link to the site of the
7th
International
Congress of Plant
Pathology
The American
Phytopathological Society
3340 Pilot Knob Road
St. Paul, MN
55121-2097 USA
e-mail: aps@scisoc.org
|

Reprinted by permission
of the British Broadcasting Corporation
Vole Power:
Herbivores prefer diseased
plants.
Maxine-Fay Miller
| Ecologists from Sweden have
discovered that grazing by bank voles can affect relations between a plant and a
disease-causing fungus. Lars Ericson and Anders Wennström of Umeå University studied
links between four species living on an island off Sweden's east coast: the perennial herb
chickweed wintergreen Trientalis europaea, a smut fungus Urocystis trientalis,
which infects the plant and causes a disease, and two herbivores (plant-eaters) that feed
on the plant -- the bank vole and a species of scale insect. |
|
The researchers set up a number
of study plots, surrounding some with cages to exclude voles and leaving others open to
act as controls. They counted the number of shoots of chickweed wintergreen in each plot,
noting whether the shoots were healthy or infected with smut fungus. |
SMUTTY TALK
Smut fungi
parasitize flowering plants, causing severe damage and often death.
They get
their name from the smut-like spore masses that develop on infected plants.
The smut
fungus Urocystis trientalis specializes on chickweed wintergreen, infecting up to
50 per cent of plants in some areas in Sweden |

Unhealthy diet. Herbivores eating chickweed wintergreen
prefer smut-fungus-infected shoots to healthy ones. (Photo: Bob Gibbons/Ardea)
|
After two summers, they
discovered that the level of fungal disease was lower in the open plots -- the ones with
voles -- than it was in the caged plots (Oikos, vol. 80,
pp107-11). Further investigation revealed that voles prefer to feed on diseased shoots
of the plant -- as do scale insects -- though the reason for this preference isn't yet
clear.
Whatever the reason, the voles have a beneficial
effect on the plant, as by removing diseased shoots from the population, they reduce the
spread of the smut fungus. |
© Copyright 1998 by The American
Phytopathological Society
© Copyright 1998 by The British Society for Plant Pathology |