Radboud Universiteit

07/01/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/01/2024 02:43

Bacteria of pest insect fool crops

Bacteria of pest insect fool crops

01 July 2024Research news item

The Southern green shield bug is a major problem for food production. The insect loves tomatoes, cucumbers and bell peppers and is responsible for up to 40 percent of crop losses. PhD research by Magda Rogowska-van der Molen, in collaboration with plant biologist Silvia Coolen, shows that the bacteria of the shield bug protect the insect by degrading plant toxins. These bacteria also make sure that the plant doesn't produce toxins against the bug. Magda will receive her doctorate on this topic on July 3 2024 at Radboud University.

Due to global warming, the Southern green shield bug is migrating North. A lot of food producing plants have no sufficient defense against these bugs. 'Plants evolve incredibly slowly,' explains microbiologist Magda Rogowska-van der Molen. 'Unlike bacteria, which evolve at lightning speed and develop ways to work around the plant's defenses. The plant has no answer to that.'

Saliva

This is how it works: when a plant is compromised by an insect, the plant secretes toxins, which a shield bug or other pest insect technically cannot deal with. The microbiologist's research shows that the Southern green shield bug has specific bacteria in its gut that can render the plant's toxins harmless. 'What was also remarkable was that, via the bug's saliva, other bacteria are transmitted to the plant to decrease the defense mechanisms against the bug.' The plant produces less toxins and the toxins that do reach the bug, are degraded by the bacteria of the bug.' The shield bug could then continue compromising the plant without too much problems.

Targeted pest control

Rogowska-van der Molen: 'We now finally understand how this works. The shield bug's success is thanks to its salivary bacteria and gut bacteria: the plant is defenseless against the bug and even if the plant is able to make toxins, the bacteria of the bug degrade those toxins. Now that we know that, we can start looking at how - without pesticides - we can target those specific bacteria, so that the shield bug no longer stands a chance. With that, a targeted pest control can be developed.'

Photo shield bug: Silvia Coolen

Contact information

For further information, please contact team Science communicationvia +31 24 361 6000 or media[at] ru.nl(media[at]ru[dot]nl).

Theme Sustainability, Nature
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