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Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 2005-Dec

The pathogen causing Dutch elm disease makes host trees attract insect vectors.

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Geoff McLeod
Regine Gries
Stephan H von Reuss
James E Rahe
Rory McIntosh
Wilfried A König
Gerhard Gries

Keywords

Abstract

Dutch elm disease is caused by the fungal pathogen Ophiostoma novo-ulmi which is transmitted by the native elm bark beetle, Hylurgopinus rufipes. We have found that four semiochemicals (the monoterpene (-)-beta-pinene and the sesquiterpenes (-)-alpha-cubebene, (+)-spiroaxa-5,7-diene and (+)-delta-cadinene) from diseased American elms, Ulmus americana, synergistically attract H. rufipes, and that sesquiterpene emission is upregulated in elm trees inoculated with O. novo-ulmi. The fungus thus manipulates host trees to enhance their apparency to foraging beetles, a strategy that increases the probability of transportation of the pathogen to new hosts.

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