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Document Description
Title
Insects
pests
and
pathogens
compromise
the
persistence
of
two
endemic
and
rare
Braya
(Brassicaceae)
Author
Squires
,
Susan
Elizabeth
,
1981-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2010.
Biology
Date
2010
Pagination
xxi, 184 leaves : ill., maps. (some col.)
Subject
Braya--Diseases
and
pests--Monitoring--Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
Diamondback
moth--Newfoundland
and
Labrador
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Biology
Discipline
Biology
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
Abstract
Rare
and
threatened
plant
species
face
a
variety
of
threats
to their
persistence
including
habitat
degradation
,
non-native
herbivores
, and
pathogens.
In this
study
we
explored
the
effects
of a
non-native
,
agricultural
pest
and
three
pathogens
on
two
rare
vascular
plants
restricted
to a
unique
ecosystem.
Agro-ecosystems
support
many
non-native
insects
, but their
potential
to
find
and
impact
rare
,
native
plants
is
largely
unknown.
Plutella
xylostella
L.
(diamondback
moth)
is
a
global
agricultural
pest
of the
Brassicaceae
family
,
including
the
endangered
Braya
longii
(Fernald)
(Long's
braya)
and
threatened
B.fernaldii
(Abbe)
(Fernald's
braya)
that are
endemic
to the
limestone
barrens
of
Newfoundland
,
Canada.
The
immigration
of
P.
xylostella
from
southern
overwintering
sites
to this
unique
ecosystem
was
monitored
with
pheromone
traps
between
2003
and
2005.
At the
same
time
individually
tagged
Braya
were
monitored
for the
presence
and
impact
of
P.
xylostella
and
three
pathogens.
Since
habitat
loss
and
deterioration
is
still
the
most
important
threat
to the
persistence
of
endangered
species
, the
frequency
of
each
pest
was
compared
between
Braya
populations
growing
on
anthropogenically
disturbed
and
undisturbed
habitat.
--
Between
2003
and
2005
,
30%
of
B.
longii
and
16%
of
B.fernaldii
were
infested
by
P.
xylostella
,
8.6%
of the
total
B.
longii
population
died
from
root
rot
(Fusarium
sp.)
,
18%
of
B.
longii
on
anthropogenically
disturbed
sites
were
infected
with an
unidentified
pathogen
causing
their
flowering
stalks
to
rot
, and
27%
of
B.fernaldii
in
northern
sites
were
infected
with an
unidentified
pathogen
causing
flowering
stalk
and
leaf
deformities.
Impacted
plants
contributed
between
9%
and
75%
less
seeds
to
annual
seed
production
than
healthy
,
flowering
plants
and had a
statistically
higher
probability
of
mortality.
The
majority
(66%-100%)
of
pathogen
infections
occurred
on
anthropogenically
disturbed
habitat.
--
Stage
based
transition
matrices
created
from these
data
and
summarized
into
deterministic
projections
predict
Braya
populations
will
decline
over
the
next
10
years.
P.xylostella
may
negatively
impact
the
persistence
of
other
rare
Brassicaceae
worldwide
because
they
can
infest
rare
plants
growing
in
native
vegetation
,
especially
when
the
vegetation
is
sparse
, and
they
, as
do
the
pathogens
,
preferentially
damage
flowering
plants.
Modelling
suggests
that the
management
of
pathogens
in
anthropogenically
disturbed
populations
will
most
improve
the
population
growth
rate
,
where
as the
management
of
P.
xylostella
in
undisturbed
populations
will
most
improve
the
population
growth
rate.
Presently
,
insufficient
attention
is
directed
to the
impacts
of
both
native
and
non-native
agricultural
pests
on
rare
host
plants;
hence
, there
is
a
need
for
both
the
conservation
and
agricultural
communities
to
cooperate
in
mitigating
their
impacts
on
native
biodiversity.
Type
Text
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a3315229
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(20.11
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Squires_SusanE.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
140686.cpd