During a recent WOLF School field trip at Bull Creek, one of the fifth graders turned over a rotting log and discovered the grisly crime scene above. By carefully excavating it, he exposed the remains of a lepidoptera pupa case, its contents consumed by a parasitoid fungus.
These white powdery structures are the fruiting bodies of an entomopathogenic fungus, Cordyceps tenuipes. (Greek entomon=insect). If one of its spores comes in contact with an unlucky moth or butterfly pupa or larva, it will germinate, penetrate the cuticle and then grow inside the host. This eventually leads to the death of the insect. Then the spore-bearing fruiting bodies emerge from the cadaver. Remnants of the victim can be seen in this photo.
There are a great number and variety of entomopathogenic fungi. In fact, 5 of the 8 fungal phyla contain species which have evolved to feed on insects. C. tenuipes and some other species have been studied for possible medical applications which are popular in China.
Cordyceps militaris in the soil - Mark Bower |
Cordyceps militaris on a dead caterpillar - MB |
Some species simply enter their host and devour it from the inside. Incredibly, a few species can infect the creature’s brain and muscles and compel it to perform certain tasks. For example, Ophiocordyceps unilateralis and C. lloydii fungi may direct an infected ant to climb a tree to a specific height so that the fungal spores will rain down on the unsuspecting ants below. In an example of familiarity breeding contempt, Kuo states:
"Some ants and termites that have evolved the ability to detect Cordyceps-infected compadres; sentry soldiers guarding the Queen kill the infected insects and take their bodies far from the nest before they can threaten the colony."
Spider succumbed to Torrubiella arachnophila -MB |
Beauveria bassiana on a wasp - MB |