Insects (Dec 2021)

Fungal Communities Vectored by <em>Ips sexdentatus</em> in Declining <em>Pinus sylvestris</em> in Ukraine: Focus on Occurrence and Pathogenicity of Ophiostomatoid Species

  • Kateryna Davydenko,
  • Rimvydas Vasaitis,
  • Malin Elfstrand,
  • Denys Baturkin,
  • Valentyna Meshkova,
  • Audrius Menkis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects12121119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. 1119

Abstract

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Drought-induced stress and attacks by bark beetle Ips sexdentatus currently result in a massive dieback of Pinus sylvestris in eastern Ukraine. Limited and fragmented knowledge is available on fungi vectored by the beetle and their roles in tree dieback. The aim was to investigate the fungal community vectored by I. sexdentatus and to test the pathogenicity of potentially aggressive species to P. sylvestris. Analysis of the fungal community was accomplished by combining different methods using insect, plant, and fungal material. The material consisted of 576 beetles and 96 infested wood samples collected from six sample plots within a 300 km radius in eastern Ukraine and subjected to fungal isolations and (beetles only) direct sequencing of ITS rDNA. Pathogenicity tests were undertaken by artificially inoculating three-to-four-year-old pine saplings with fungi. For the vector test, pine logs were exposed to pre-inoculated beetles. In all, 56 fungal taxa were detected, 8 exclusively by isolation, and 13 exclusively by direct sequencing. Those included nine ophiostomatoids, five of which are newly reported as I. sexdentatus associates. Two ophiostomatoid fungi, which exhibited the highest pathogenicity, causing 100% dieback and mortality, represented genera Graphium and Leptographium. Exposure of logs to beetles resulted in ophiostomatoid infections. In conclusion, the study revealed numerous I. sexdentatus-vectored fungi, several of which include aggressive tree pathogens.

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