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Do water‐limiting conditions predispose N orway spruce to bark beetle attack?
Author(s) -
Netherer Sigrid,
Matthews Bradley,
Katzensteiner Klaus,
Blackwell Emma,
Henschke Patrick,
Hietz Peter,
Pennerstorfer Josef,
Rosner Sabine,
Kikuta Silvia,
Schume Helmut,
Schopf Axel
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/nph.13166
Subject(s) - twig , curculionidae , bark beetle , infestation , bark (sound) , picea abies , limiting , biology , host (biology) , water stress , resistance (ecology) , botany , horticulture , ecology , mechanical engineering , engineering
Summary Drought is considered to enhance susceptibility of N orway spruce ( P icea abies ) to infestations by the Eurasian spruce bark beetle ( I ps typographus , C oleoptera: C urculionidae), although empirical evidence is scarce. We studied the impact of experimentally induced drought on tree water status and constitutive resin flow, and how physiological stress affects host acceptance and resistance. We established rain‐out shelters to induce both severe (two full‐cover plots) and moderate (two semi‐cover plots) drought stress. In total, 18 sample trees, which were divided equally between the above treatment plots and two control plots, were investigated. Infestation was controlled experimentally using a novel ‘attack box’ method. Treatments influenced the ratios of successful and defended attacks, but predisposition of trees to infestation appeared to be mainly driven by variations in stress status of the individual trees over time. With increasingly negative twig water potentials and decreasing resin exudation, the defence capability of the spruce trees decreased. We provide empirical evidence that water‐limiting conditions impair Norway spruce resistance to bark beetle attack. Yet, at the same time our data point to reduced host acceptance by I . typographus with more extreme drought stress, indicated by strongly negative pre‐dawn twig water potentials.

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