CORDYCEPS FUNGI AND INSECTS Flashcards
What is Cordyceps Fungi?
- a genus of parasitic fungi that primarily infect insects and other arthropods
- It manipulates the host’s behavior to facilitate its own growth, ultimately killing the host before emerging to release spores
How Does it Affect Insects?
- Enzymes are released by the fungus, these break down an insect’s exoskeleton
- More enzymes are released and these interfere with the host’s nervous system
- The fungus later grows and uses the host’s nutrients to grow and reproduce.
how does it affect insects - Mind Control
Cordyceps manipulates the host’s behavior by affecting its nervous system, compelling it to climb to an elevated position.
how does it affect insects - Reproduction Phase
A specialized structure, the fruiting body, emerges from the host, releasing spores for the next phase of infection.
Ecological Consequences: population level - Population Regulation
- Cordyceps infections can regulate insect populations by causing mortality in infected individuals.
- If conditions are favorable for Cordyceps, it could lead to localized declines in specific insect populations
Ecological Consequences: population level - Distribution Patterns
Cordyceps may influence the distribution of infected insects.
Ecological Consequences: community level - predators
- Predators that rely on infected insects as a food source may experience fluctuations in prey availability
- Behavioral changes in infected insects, such as climbing to elevated positions, may make them more visible and accessible to certain predators
Ecological Consequences: community level - Competitors
- Changes in insect population sizes can indirectly affect competitors through alterations in resource availability
- If a competitor relies on the same resources as the infected insect, a decline in the infected population could influence the competitor’s abundance.
Ecological Consequences: community level - Symbiotic Relationships
Symbiotic relationships involving insects may be disrupted if one partner is affected by Cordyceps
Large-Scale Ecological Consequences - Cascading Effects on Food Webs
- The decline or altered distribution of insect populations due to Cordyceps infections can have cascading effects on higher trophic levels
- Changes in insect abundance can impact the organisms that depend on them for food, potentially leading to fluctuations in predator populations
Large-Scale Ecological Consequences - Ecosystem Stability
- Cordyceps infections contribute to the natural dynamics of ecosystems, playing a role in population regulation
- While these infections can cause localized disruptions, they may also contribute to overall ecosystem stability by preventing unchecked population growth of certain insect species.
explain the evolutionary trends
- insect-infection has evolved multiple times in fungi
- Usually involves the ability to digest chitin (cuticle).
- plant-sucking hemipteran often infected
explain the evolutionary trends - why are plant sucking hemiptera most infected
Perhaps because they stuck on substrate for long periods of time