New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research abstracts
Interactions between endophyte (Neotyphodium spp.) and ploidy in
hybrid and perennial ryegrass cultivars and their effects on Argentine stem
weevil (Listronotus bonariensis)
A. J. Popay1
D. E. Hume2
K. L. Davis3
B. A. Tapper2
1AgResearch
Ruakura Research Centre
Private Bag 3123
Hamilton, New Zealand
2AgResearch
Grasslands Research Centre
Private Bag 11 008
Palmerston North, New Zealand
3Dexcel
Private Bag 3221
Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract Argentine stem weevil damage was assessed in
1998 and 1999 on two diploid perennial ryegrasses (cvs. ‘Yatsyn’ and ‘Samson’),
a diploid long-rotation hybrid ryegrass (cv. ‘Marsden’), a tetraploid perennial
ryegrass selection (‘4N’) and in a tetraploid hybrid (cv. ‘Greenstone’)
in a field trial in Taranaki. ‘Greenstone’ was infected with a selected
Neotyphodium endophyte that produces peramine and ergovaline but not
lolitrem B. All other cultivars were naturally infected with endophytes that
produce all three alkaloids. In the first year, percent endophyte infection
levels were low in ‘Greenstone’ (61%), ‘Marsden’ (70%) and ‘4N’ (71%) relative
to ‘Yatsyn’ (85%) and ‘Samson’ (86%), but increased in the second year to
greater than 88% in all cultivars. Argentine stem weevil adult feeding and
larval damage were greatest on ‘Greenstone’ and least on ‘Yatsyn’ and
‘Samson’in both years. ‘Greenstone’ tillers damaged by larvae were more
severely affected than tillers of other cultivars. Individually and in combination,
percent endophyte and peramine and lolitrem B levels in the leaf lamina were
correlated with adult activity which in turn was the main factor affecting
larval damage. Overall, the tetraploid and hybrid species sustained more damage
than the diploids and perennials. This was attributed mainly to lower leaf
lamina peramine concentrations in the hybrid and tetraploid combinations which
affected adult feeding, but additional attractiveness factors in these cultivars
may also play a role in their susceptibility to Argentine stem weevil. The
absence of lolitrem B was not a major factor in the number of tillers damaged
by larvae in ‘Greenstone’, but may have resulted in more severe damage
to those tillers
Keywords ryegrass; cultivar; ploidy; hybrid; perennial;
endophyte; alkaloids; Argentine stem weevil; Neotyphodium; Lolium
A02063; Received 14 October 2002; accepted 13 June 2003; online publication
date 5 November 2003
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 2003, Vol. 46: 311–319
0028–8233/03/4604–0311 $7.00/0 © The Royal Society of New Zealand
2003
PDF file of entire paper: Print-quality (297K) |
screen-quality (89K)
This year's abstracts |
Journal home page |
All abstracts |
Publishing home page