Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6389761 Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Microsporidia are believed to play little or no role in outbreaks of the jack pine budworm, Choristoneura pinus pinus Freeman (Lepidoptrera: Tortricidae), because the short duration (2-4 years) of those outbreaks may not permit significant build-up of the pathogen. We conducted the first survey of Nosema sp. (Microsporidia: Nosematidae) over the course of a recent jack pine budworm outbreak in Ontario. Between 2004 and 2010 the outbreak defoliated a cumulative total of 1.78 million ha. Microscopic examination of ∼15,000 overwintering larvae collected over 6 years in sites with densities of 3 larvae per branch or more revealed widespread occurrence of Nosema at generally high infection intensities. The pathogen was present in 69.5% of the 518 plots that were monitored. Prevalence of infection was generally low (below 40% in 84% of plots with infected larvae) but reached high levels (80-95%) locally and increased rapidly in most infestations within 1-2 years of onset. We hypothesize that the habit of early-instar larvae to feed on developing male flowers (pollen cones) after spring emergence is critical in allowing rapid build-up of Nosema by increasing efficiency of horizontal transmission (higher density of both infected larvae and egested spores). Nosema infection may contribute to the complexity of jack pine budworm outbreak patterns by affecting egg recruitment and early-instar survival at the stand level in concert with known effects of budworm-induced reductions in pollen cone production on those processes.

Graphical abstractDownload full-size imageHighlights► We showed widespread occurrence of Nosema during a jack pine budworm outbreak. ► Although generally low, prevalence reached infection levels of 80-95% locally. ► Nosema was able to build up rapidly despite short outbreak duration (2-4 years). ► Pollen cone-feeding behaviour of early-instars is postulated to enable this rapid build-up.

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