Title of article :
Strong bottom-up and weak top-down effects in soil: nematode-parasitized insects and nematode-trapping fungi
Author/Authors :
Jaffee، نويسنده , , B.A. and Strong، نويسنده , , D.R.، نويسنده ,
Pages :
11
From page :
1011
To page :
1021
Abstract :
The soils of the Bodega Marine Reserve (BMR, Sonoma County, California) contain many nematode-trapping fungi and many ghost moth larvae parasitized by entomopathogenic nematodes. The current study determined whether these nematode-parasitized moth larvae, which can produce very large numbers of nematodes, enhanced the population densities of nematode-trapping fungi and whether the fungi trapped substantial numbers of nematodes emerging and dispersing from moths. Wax moths were used in place of ghost moths because the former are easier to obtain. When nematode-parasitized moth larvae were added to laboratory microcosms containing BMR field soil, the population densities of four nematode-trapping fungi increased substantially. The greatest increase in population density was by Arthrobotrys oligospora, which uses adhesive networks to capture nematodes. A. oligospora population density increased about 10 times when the added moth larvae were parasitized by the nematode Heterorhabditis marelatus and about 100 times when added moth larvae were parasitized by the nematode Steinernema glaseri. Other trapping fungi endemic to the soil and enhanced by nematode-parasitized moth larvae included Myzocytium glutinosporum, Drechslerella brochopaga, and Gamsylella gephyropaga, which produce adhesive spores, constricting rings, and adhesive branches, respectively. The data suggest that the previously documented abundance and diversity of nematode-trapping fungi in BMR soil can be explained, at least in part, by nematode-parasitized insects, although that inference requires further studies with ghost moths. The strong bottom-up enhancement of nematode-trapping fungi was not matched by a strong top-down suppression of nematodes, i.e. the fungi trapped fewer than 30% of dispersing nematodes.
Keywords :
ARTHROBOTRYS OLIGOSPORA , entomopathogenic nematode , Drechslerella brochopaga , Heterorhabditis marelatus , Gamsylella gephyropaga , Myzocytium glutinosporum , Soil food web , Steinernema glaseri , Nematode-trapping fungi
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
1995471
Link To Document :
بازگشت