| Literature DB >> 31585459 |
Elisha Mrabu Jenoh1,2,3, Etienne P de Villiers4, Santie M de Villiers5, Sheila Okoth6, Joyce Jefwa7, Esther Kioko7, Davies Kaimenyi5, Marijke Hendrickx8, Farid Dahdouh-Guebas2, Nico Koedam3.
Abstract
Insect damage on trees can severely affect the quality of timber, reduce the fecundity of the host and render it susceptible to fungal infestation and disease. Such pathology weakens or eventually kills the host. Infestation by two insect woodborer species (a moth and a beetle) is causing mortality of Sonneratia alba, a wide-ranging pioneer mangrove species of the Indo-Pacific. Establishing the infestation mechanism of the two insect woodborer species is an initial and essential step towards understanding their ecological role in the mangroves and in determining sustainable management priorities and options. Our main objectives were to investigate the infestation mechanism employed by the two insect woodborers which infest S. alba trees, to establish the occurrence of secondary infestation by endophytic fungi in the infested S. alba branches, and to explore a control management option to the woodborer infestation. We conducted an external inspection of infested branches in two large embayments in Kenya, Gazi Bay and Mida Creek, and by splitting infested branches we determined the respective internal infestation mechanisms. Infested wood samples from Gazi Bay and Mida Creek were incubated at 28±1°C for 3-5 days to establish the presence of fungi. A survey was conducted in both Gazi Bay and Mida Creek to ascertain the presence of ants on S. alba. The infestation characteristics of the two insect woodborer species were different. It took 6-8 months for the beetle to kill a branch of 150 cm-200 cm long. For the moth to kill a branch, it depended upon several factors including the contribution by multiple species, other than the moth infestation alone. A total of 15 endophytic fungal species were identified. Two ant species Oecophylla longipoda and a Pheidole sp. inhabited 62% and 69% respectively of sampled S. alba trees in Gazi Bay whereas only Pheidole sp. inhabited 17% of the sampled S. alba trees in Mida Creek. In summary, we have documented the time it takes each woodborer species to kill a branch, the infestation mechanism of the two insect woodborers, and we hypothesized on the role of two ant species. The presence of several different fungal species was ascertained, and we discussed their possible role in the infested wood. Our results cannot unambiguously associate the woodborers and identified fungi. We recommend further studies to investigate the presence or absence, and if present, the nature of fungi in the gut of the woodborers.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31585459 PMCID: PMC6777984 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Map of Kenya (inset) with red dots highlighting the Sampling sites (Mida Creek and Gazi Bay).
Circles at the sampling sites represents the sampling plots where the study was conducted.
Fig 2Infested S. alba forest in Gazi Bay and Mida Creek (C).
(A) Sonneratia alba with dead infested branches in Gazi Bay, (B) a picture of a moth woodborer infested branch with frass, (C) a beetle-infested S. alba tree in Mida Creek and (D) damage done by Bottegia rubra before exiting a S. alba branch. The arrow shows the base of a branch that has been girdled by the beetle before exiting the infested branch. Apart from infestation by the metarbelid moth, the mangrove of Gazi Bay (A) has suffered from sedimentation and infestation by Agelanthus spp. a canopy plant hemiparasite, which is very common.
A table of GPS co-ordinates of the sampling sites and plots used in this study.
| Sampling plots/sites | GPS points |
|---|---|
| 04°25'901''S 039°30'676''E | |
| 04°25'589''S 039°30'789''E | |
| 03°21'100''S 039°58'124''E | |
| 03°21'100''S 039°58'124''E | |
| 03°21'S 039°58'E | |
| 03°34'S 039°96'E | |
| 04° 44'S 039° 51'E | |
| 03°20'S 039°57'E |
Summary of the infestation manifestation strategies employed by the two insect woodborers to infest S. alba in Kenya.
| Moth (Lepidoptera: Cossoidea | Beetle (Cerambycidae: Lamiinae) |
|---|---|
| Attacks branches thicker than 1.5 cm (n = 120). | Attacks branches of minimum diameter 0.5 cm to 2.1 cm maximum (n = 120) |
| Produces brownish frass from its entry point hole. | No frass produced at any location on the branch. |
| Entry point always visible when frass is removed. | Entry point never visible. |
| Infested branches undergo very gradual chlorosis and gradual defoliation. | Infested branches undergo rapid leaf chlorosis, wilting, browning and eventual rapid defoliation. |
| Insect practices multiple infestations at both the branch and at the same entry point in a branch, i.e. a branch is infested either once or at several locations and one entry point is shared by several individuals. | A branch is infested only once. Infestation is only in one location within a branch and there is only one entry point for an infested branch. |
| Larvae either make a single or multiple feeding galleries. | Larvae make only one feeding gallery. |
| Feeding galleries are situated anywhere within the wood tissue and the pith of the branch. | Feeding galleries are situated at the pith only. |
| ssThe galleries in the infested branch do not follow a particular feeding direction but are rather haphazardly oriented. | Galleries always have a top-down orientation (galleries are formed from the leaves moving downwards towards the base of branch). |
| The length of the feeding galleries range from 1.2–15.3 ± 3 cm (n = 120). | The average length of the feeding galleries is 200 ± 9 cm long (n = 120). |
| It attacks branches of height 159.5 ± 7.2 cm (n = 42 cm) from the ground on average and branches of 1.5 ± 0.3 cm (n = 120) minimum width. | It attacks branches situated 77 ± 6.5 cm from the ground as the lowest height to be attacked (n = 62) trees. |
Values after ± refer to the standard error of the various measurements.
Fig 3The percentage (%) occurrence of ants (Oecophylla longinoda and Pheidole sp.) in the four plots in Gazi Bay (top graph) on the sampled trees.
The bottom graph shows the average percentage (%) occurrence of the two ant species found inhabiting S. alba trees in the two sampling sites (Mida Creek and Gazi Bay). Oecophylla longinoda was not recorded in Mida Creek.
Summary of the fungal species found in the branches of infested S. alba trees in Gazi Bay and Mida Creek.
| Site | Species | Moth | Beetle | MALDI | DNA | GBAcc. no. | % sim. | (ID) | (IR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gazi | ✓ | - | - | Seq | U65309 | 99.55 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Gazi | ✓ | - | - | Seq | KP256849 | 99.66 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Gazi | ✓ | - | - | Seq | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | ✓ | - | MS | - | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | - | ✓ | MS | - | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | - | ✓ | - | Seq | MF000937 | 100 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Gazi | ✓ | - | - | Seq | MF099868 | 99.64 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Gazi | ✓ | ✓ | MS | Seq | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | ✓ | - | MS | - | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | ✓ | - | MS | - | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | ✓ | ✓ | - | Seq | Z68188 | 100 | ✓ | - | |
| Gazi | ✓ | ✓ | - | Seq | ✓ | - | |||
| Gazi | ✓ | - | - | Seq | MF116270 | 99.76 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Mida | ✓ | ✓ | - | Seq | LM653116 | 100 | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Mida | ✓ | - | - | Seq | LN834357 | 100 | ✓ | - | |
| Mida | ✓ | - | MS | Seq | LT558897 | 99.42 | ✓ | - | |
| Mida | - | ✓ | - | Seq | NR:103695 | 99.66 | ✓ | - | |
| Mida | ✓ | ✓ | MS | Seq | KU192990 | 100 | ✓ | - | |
| Mida | ✓ | ✓ | MS | Seq | ✓ | - | |||
| Mida | ✓ | ✓ | MS | Seq | ✓ | - | |||
| Mida | ✓ | ✓ | MS | Seq | ✓ | - |
* Match obtained from only one short read (S_1 70bp and S_9 39bp) The method of fungal identification and the associated woodborer is shown. Species names of isolated endophytic fungi identified using both molecular methods (DNA sequencing) and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (similarity to known DNA sequences and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry profiles respectively). The symbol (✓) and (-) means presence and absence of that particular entry respectively. ID and IR refer to ‘infested dead’ and ‘infested recovered’, respectively. Where the abbreviations DNA Seq (DNA sequencing) and MS (MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry method) appear, it means the method was used at that particular entry. GB ACC no. stands for GenBank accession number of match. % sim stands for percentage similarity.
Fig 4A scheme summarizing the differences of the infestation mechanisms employed by the two woodborers to infest S. alba in Kenya.
Fig 5A scheme indicating the major challenges faced by S. alba and the interactions among the different organisms influencing its survival.
The kind of interaction between the organisms is written next to the arrows. Blue dotted lines indicate an assumed beneficial relationship between organisms, a black line indicates a relationship thought to be beneficial, red lines indicate a harmful relationship, whereas a red dotted line indicates a relationship thought to be harmful.