Wednesday 11 June 2014

Rust Fungi: Femme Fatales, Gorgons, and a Surprising Honeybee Connection

Arthuriomyces peckianus on black raspberry leaves
The first important thing you need to know is that we make wild black raspberry wine. The second thing you need to know is that it's amazingly delicious. The third thing is that, this year, it's unlikely we'll harvest even a handful of berries, let alone the eight pounds we need for a batch of wine.

blackberries infected with orange rust fungus





Tragedy has struck! Mind you, it's an uncommonly beautiful tragedy: a parasitic rust has attacked every one of our black raspberry patches. The colour of this fungus, unlike any iron rust I've ever seen, is a fluorescent 1969-blacklight-poster orange, a don't-hit-this-on-a-dark-road-in-the-middle-of-the-night orange, a ridiculously blinding, especially-when-placed-against-new-green-raspberry-leaf orange. So pretty! So deadly!
Black raspberry rust on underside of leaf.
There are more than 7,000 species of rust fungi out there, obligate parasites that cause varying degrees of destruction to their hosts, some of which are major food sources for our species. 

Arthuriomyces peckianus


The rust on my black raspberries is Arthuriomyces peckianus, which is extremely similar to Gymnoconia nitens, a species that prefers blackberries. Both are autoecious, meaning they require only a single host to complete their life cycle. Most other rusts are heteroecious, alternating between two completely unrelated hosts. Some of these dual-host species have such a complicated reproduction strategy that they produce what I think is a plethora of spore types, covering all the bases with not just one or two, but up to five different kinds of spores (for more info go here). 
Arthuriomyces peckianus close-up
Arthuriomyces peckianus aeciospores
Arthuriomyces peckianus aeciospores

Puccinia coronata


Members of the genus Puccinia for instance, some of which are pathogens of cereal grains, all produce five spore types. The one my friend Tony and I found growing on buckthorn leaves while collecting for Ontario's 2014 Bioblitz, Puccinia coronata, causes oat and barley crown rust. First found in North America in Nebraska in 1992, here it is in Toronto less than twenty-five years later. Its affect on oat and barley yields is not yet known. But look how pretty it is!

close-up of Puccinia coronata rust fungus on buckthorn
Puccinia coronata forms tiny erupting bumps on the underside of buckthorn leaves.
Puccinia coronata aeciospores
Buckthorn rust aeciospores


Cronartium ribicola


Cronartium ribicola rust fungus on white pine
Cronartium ribicola attacks five-needle pines.
Another rust that has five spore stages is Cronartium ribicola, that creates very cool-looking yellow-orange hieroglyphic blisters on the trunks and branches of white pine. These blisters swell and eventually burst open spreading millions of spores far and wide. White pine blister rust's unlikely alternate hosts are wild and domesticated currants and gooseberries, as well as Indian paint brush and, of all things, snapdragons. Though it was introduced to North America more than a hundred years ago, our five-needle pines still have little resistance to it and suffer high mortality when infected.  







Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae


Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae on cedar
Despite its less intense colour, my favourite rust, if one can have a favourite, is cedar-apple rust. Known by the Latin mouthful, Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae, this species jumps back and forth between eastern red cedar (and other junipers) and apple or crabapple trees. It overwinters in the form of a gall on cedar branches. When spring rains arrive, horn-like structures, or telia, are extruded from the galls. The telia absorb moisture and swell, producing a mop of jelly-like orange snakes, the Gorgon of my title. They can shrink and swell numerous times in a single season, producing thousands of teliospores (a spore type) that, in turn, produce basidia, from which basidiospores (another spore type!) are expelled. Wind carries the basidiospores to apple trees, where the disease cycle continues. 


Infected apple trees can suffer major defoliation that can increase winter damage, affect fruit size and quality, and deform apples. Apple growers are sometimes advised to destroy all cedar trees growing within a mile of their orchards, which is perhaps an unrealistic way to deal with the problem. Of course, the other way to stop infection is to spray with fungicides. Or eat gnarly apples, which, incidentally, make another great wine.


close-up of cedar-apple rust fungus
The jelly-like telia of cedar-apple rust appear in
the spring on eastern red cedar.

The Honeybee Connection


But here's where rusts get really cool. For more than a century, people have been observing honeybees collecting spore "pollen" from various species of rusts. This happens often enough that rust spores are regularly found in hives as well as in the guts of honeybees (I have to say I was thrilled to hear that beekeepers inspect their bees' gut contents!). So what's going on?


honeybees collect rust fungi spores the same way they collect pollen


First off, many individual rust spores are similar in size to the pollens bees collect, so it's easy for them to pack them into their pollen baskets. Honeybees are more likely to collect rust spores when there is a dearth of pollen. Rust spores aren't high in protein, but there may be enough to supplement the bees' diet when pollen sources are low. Though some spore-collecting bee colonies seem fine, others show clear signs of decline. Is this a sign that the spores are toxic, or does it simply point to poor nutrition in the hives? More study is obviously needed.

The dispersal of spores by honeybees and other insects is certainly advantageous for rust fungi and they have clearly evolved to tap into this transport system. Their day-glo orange colours, high in yellows, are very visible to honeybees and other insects. Some rusts also produce a sweet pycnidial secretion, mimicking flower nectar, while others go so far as to produce floral scents. Some rusts use all three of these strategies.

So, basically, the orange spots or blisters produced by many rusts are "pseudoflowers," and their purpose, using colour, and sometimes sugar and scent, is to attract insects to help carry their spores closer to their alternate hosts, or, in the case of the Arthuriomyces peckianus on my black raspberries that has no alternate host, to attract insects that will then carry spores to an uninfected berry patch where the insects might visit real flowers that are, conveniently, blossoming at the same time that the rust is producing spores. Sadly, I have a feeling our run of black raspberry wine is over.




More Information:

Black raspberry rust
Oat and barley crown rust
White pine blister rust
Cedar apple rust

Bees & Rust Spore References





Raguso, R.A., and Roy, B.A. (1998) ‘Floral’ scent production by Puccinia rust fungi that mimic flowers. Molecular Ecology 7, 1127-1136

DANIEL McALPINE MEMORIAL LECTURE 1999 

Bees and fungi, with special reference to certain plant pathogens

D.E. Shaw 


Shaw, D.E., and Robertson, D.F. (1980) Collection of neurospora by honeybees.  Trans. British Mycol Soc. 74 (3): 459-464.   



Bee/Fungi related: Interesting article about polypore extracts being tested on honeybees to fight viruses spread by Varroa destructor mites.

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