FACTORS AFFECTING CHOICE OF BUDS BY LARVAE OF THE ASH BUD MOTH PRAYS FRAXINELLA BJERK (LEP, YPONOMEUTIDAE), AND THE IMPLICATIONS FOR ASH DIEBACK

Citation
A. Foggo et Mr. Speight, FACTORS AFFECTING CHOICE OF BUDS BY LARVAE OF THE ASH BUD MOTH PRAYS FRAXINELLA BJERK (LEP, YPONOMEUTIDAE), AND THE IMPLICATIONS FOR ASH DIEBACK, Journal of applied entomology, 119(1), 1995, pp. 29-34
Citations number
19
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology
ISSN journal
09312048
Volume
119
Issue
1
Year of publication
1995
Pages
29 - 34
Database
ISI
SICI code
0931-2048(1995)119:1<29:FACOBB>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Ash dieback is a chronic condition affecting a high percentage of matu re pre-senescent individuals of Fraxinus excelsior L. growing in hedge rows in mainland Britain. The ash bud moth has been mooted as a possib le causal agent of dieback through attacking terminal buds of twigs an d curbing tree growth: dieback is characterised by failure of terminal buds to flush. Patterns of winter bud utilisation by larvae of the as h bud moth Prays fraxinella were determined by examination of samples gathered during a field survey in 1989. Further twigs gathered in 1993 were used to determine mean values for various characteristics of bud s which might influence bud choice by larvae. These bud characteristic s were used to generate expected patterns of larval utilisation of bud s at different positions on the twig; observed and expected distributi ons were compared by G-tests. P. fraxinella larvae display a complex p reference for buds situated at different points on the twigs, with pre ference for buds being strongly affected by bud size, and with prefere nce for buds in the middle of the twigs being higher than that for eit her apical or basal buds possibly due to interactions between bud size , scales thicknesses, and availability of food within the buds. These findings suggest that failure of terminal buds to flush in instances o f ash dieback are not likely to be due to bud moth attack. Size based preference for buds may have deleterious consequences for young trees, however, in which lateral buds are often too small to provide adequat e resources for P. fraxinella larvae.