Houston, Texas
August 30, 2005
Bitter-tasting fescue takes over
more quickly with help of plant-eating bugs, animals
New research by biologists at
Rice University,
Indiana University and George
Mason University reveals how some non-native fescue grass gets a
leg up over competing native plants: it's passed over by
plant-eating insects and animals because its leaves are laced
with toxic alkaloids, thanks to a symbiotic fungus that has
co-evolved with the grass.
In a 54-month study conducted
at Indiana University, scientists showed that 'tall fescue,' a
common variety that is infected with the symbiotic fungus
Neotyphodium coenophialum, tended to choke out uninfected fescue
and native plant species. Tall fescue took over test plots much
more quickly when herbivores had full access.
The research appears in the
Aug. 30 issue of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Science.
"The practical implications of
our findings are that the more herbivores there are in an area,
the more likely it will be that infected tall fescue grass will
spread and suppress native plants," said co-author Jennifer
Rudgers, now an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary
biology at Rice.
Fescue, which is native to the
Mediterranean, covers an estimated 37 million U.S. acres. It is
cultivated for grazing and is often used as turf grass on lawns,
golf courses and highway rights-of-way. Ranchers do not
typically cultivate tall fescue because the symbiotic fungus it
carries, known as an endophyte, produces alkaloids that have
negative health effects for livestock. It is estimated that 80
percent of U.S. fescue is endophyte-infected, and in some
applications, like turf grass, it's the preferred variety.
Prior research on hereditary
plant symbionts like the fescue endophyte have tended to look at
plant-fungal pairings in isolation. Rudgers said she, post-doc
advisor Keith Clay of Indiana University, and co-author Jenny
Holah of George Mason University sought to get a more realistic
picture of the ecological effects of symbiosis.
"We wanted to find out how the
surrounding community affected the relationship between its host
and its symbiont," she said. "The implications of the research
are broad because it's estimated that similar fungal symbionts
exist in more than 20 percent of native U.S. grasses."
The tall fescue study was
conducted on 60 plots near Bloomington, Ind., that measured 25
square meters apiece. At the start of the 4.5-year study, the
land was plowed and planted with fescue seeds that sprouted
alongside native grasses. Half of the seeds were tall fescue,
which carries the fungal symbiont, and half did not carry the
symbiont. The fungus is not transmitted by insects or wind and
is only found in plants that sprout from infected seeds.
Half of the test plots were
fenced to keep out foraging animals, and half of the unfenced
and fenced plots were sprayed with an insecticide to suppress
insect herbivores. Tall fescue progressed most slowly in plots
that were both sprayed and fenced, constituting about 50 percent
of live plant mass in the plots by study's end. In unfenced and
unsprayed plots, tall fescue faired best, contributing to 75
percent of the plot by study completion.
"Importantly, we found that
more fescue in the unsprayed and unfenced plots was
endophyte-infected compared to the plots with
herbivore-reduction treatments," said Rudgers "This is
significant because it shows that the herbivores actually drive
an increase in the relative abundance of infected plants."
In follow-up studies, Rudgers
plans to see how tall fescue fares against competitors under
drought and non-drought conditions, and she also plans to study
symbiotic relationships in native grasses, including some Texas
species.
The research was funded by the
National Science Foundation. |