Insect-Fungal Associations: Ecology and Evolution

Insect-Fungal Associations: Ecology and Evolution

Insect-Fungal Associations: Ecology and Evolution

Insect-Fungal Associations: Ecology and Evolution

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Overview

Insects and fungi have a shared history of association in common habitats where together they endure similar environmental conditions, but only recently have mycologists and entomologists recognized and had the techniques to study the intricacies of some of the associations. This new volume covers "seven wonders of the insect-fungus world" for which exciting new results have become available, often due to the use of new methods that include phylogenetic analysis and development of molecular markers. Eleven chapters of the volume are presented in two sections, "Fungi that act against insects" and "Fungi mutualistic with insects" that cover a number of major themes. Examples of necrotrophic parasites of insects are discussed, not only for biological control potential, but also as organisms with population structure and complex multipartite interactions; a beneficial role for symptomless endophytes in broad-leafed plants is proposed; biotrophic fungal parasites with reduced morphologies are placed among relatives using phylogenetic methods; complex methods of fungal spore dispersal include interactions with one or more arthropods; the farming behavior of New World attine ants is compared with that of humans and the Old World fungus-growing termites; certain mycophagous insects use fungi as a sole nutritional resource; and other insects obtain nutritional supplements from yeasts. Insects involved in fungal associations include--but are not limited to--members of the Coleoptera, Diptera, Homoptera, Hymenoptera, and Isoptera. The fungi involved in interactions with insects may be clustered taxonomically, as is the case for Ascomycetes in the Hypocreales (e.g., Beauveria, Metarhizium, Fusarium), ambrosia fungi in the genera ophiostoma and ceratocystis and their asexual relatives, Laboulbeniomycetes, Saccharomycetes, and the more basal Microsporidia. Other groups, however, have only occasional members (e.g., mushrooms cultivated by attine ants and termites) in such associations. The chapters included in this volume constitute a modern crash course in the study of insect-fungus associations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190290351
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 02/03/2005
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 15 MB
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About the Author

Fernando E. Vega is an insect pathologist at the Insect Biocontrol Laboratory in Beltsville, Maryland, a U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service facility. He researches developing innovative biological control methods to control the coffee berry borer, the most devastating pest of coffee throughout the world. Meredith Blackwell is a mycologist using cultural, morphological, and molecular characters in her studies of the biology of associations between fungi and insects. She has conducted field studies in the Sonoran Desert, northern Gulf Coast, Canada, and Panama.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Seven Wonders of the Insect-Fungus World, Meredith Blackwell and Fernando E. VegaPart I. Fungi Acting Against Insects1. Phylogenetics of the insect Pathogenic Genus Beauveria, Stephen A. Rehner2. Phylogeography of Metarhizium, an Insect Pathogenic Fungus, Michael J. Bidochka and Cherrie L. Small3. Interactions Between Entomopathogenic Fungi and Arthropod Natural Enemies, Michael J. Furlong and Leslie C. Lewis4. Ecology and Evolution of Fungal Endophytes and Their Roles Against Insects, Elizabeth Arnold and Leslie C. Lewis5. The Fungal Roots of Microspordian Parasites, Naomi M. Fast and Patrick J. Keeling6. Fungal Biotrophic Parasites of Insects and Other Arthropods, Alex Weir and Meredith BlackwellPart II. Fungi Mutualistic with Insects7. Reciprical Illumination: A Composition of Agriculture in Humans and in Fungus-Growing Ants, Ted R. Schultz, Urlich G. Mueller, Cameron R. Currie, and Stephen A. Rehner8. Evolutionary Dynamics of the Mutualistic Symbiosis between Fungus-Growing Termites and Termitomyces Fungi, Duur K. Aanen and Jacobus J. Boomsma9. The Role of Yeasts as Insect Endosymbionts, Fernando E. Vega and Patrick F. Dowd10. The Beetle Gut as a Habitat for New Species of Yeasts, Sung-Oui Suh and Meredith Blackwell11. Ecology and Evolution of Mycophagous Bark Beetles and Their Fungal Partners, Thomas C. HarringtonConclusion: Symbioses, Biocomplexity, and Metagenomes, Fernando E. Vega and Meredith Blackwell
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