ESA Annual Meetings Online Program

False ring formation in eastern hemlock branches: Impacts of hemlock woolly adelgid and elongate hemlock scale

Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Exhibit Hall A, Floor One (Knoxville Convention Center)
Liahna Gonda-King , Biological Sciences, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI
Laura Radville , Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA
Evan L. Preisser , Biological Sciences, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI
Herbivores can alter plant physiology through the induction of abnormal wood formation. Some insect herbivores induce the formation of false rings, a band of thick-walled latewood cells within the earlywood portion of the tree ring that reduces water transport. Hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae), and elongate hemlock scale (Fiorinia externa) are invasive insects that feed on eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis). Adelges tsugae has a greater effect on tree health than F. externa, but the mechanism underlying their differential effect is unknown. We explored their effects by assessing growth ring formation in branches of trees that had been experimentally infested for four years with A. tsugae, F. externa, or neither insect. We measured false ring density, ring growth, and earlywood:latewood ratios in the two most recently deposited growth rings. Branches from A. tsugae-infested trees had 30% more false rings than branches from F. externa-infested trees and 50% more than branches from uninfested trees. Branches from F. externa-infested trees and control trees did not differ in false ring formation. Radial growth and earlywood: latewood ratios did not differ among treatments. Our results show that two invasive herbivores with piercing-sucking mouth parts have differing effects on false ring formation in eastern hemlock. These false rings may be the product of a systemic plant hypersensitive response to feeding by A. tsugae on hemlock stems. If false rings are responsible for or symptomatic of hemlock water stress, this may provide a potential explanation for the relatively large effect of A. tsugae infestations on tree health.
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