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Experimental testing of rust fungus‐mediated herbivory resistance in Betula pendula
Authors:K Saikkonen  J Ahlholm  M Helander  M Poteri  J Tuominen
Abstract:Correlative evidence suggests that pathogenic leaf rust fungus, Melampsoridium betulinum, in late summer may negatively affect folivorous insects in the following summer. Correlative association does not necessarily, however, reveal causality. Alternatively, other interconnected plant characters may determine rust densities and herbivore performance. In this study, we used birch clones and rust fungus inoculations to manipulatively test the effects of birch rust and birch genotypes on the growth performance of folivorous moth larvae of Epirrita autumnata (Lep. Geometridae) in the subsequent year. The inoculation treatment increased rust densities (three‐ to 60‐fold) compared with natural infection levels. E. autumnata performance varied among birch clones and showed 4% lower growth performance on rust‐inoculated trees. However, the larval performance did not differ between rust‐treated shoots and untreated control shoots and the use of tree‐specific rust densities as a covariant in statistical analyses failed to reveal any negative association between rust fungus and larval performance. As the slight difference in larval growth performance also levelled until pupation, we propose that rust infection has biologically insignificant importance to the performance of E. autumnata.
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