Herbivore-Induced Plant Volatiles Can Serve as Host Location Cues for a Generalist and a Specialist Egg Parasitoid |
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Authors: | M. F. G. V. Peñaflor M. Erb L. A. Miranda A. G. Werneburg J. M. S. Bento |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Entomology and Acarology, Laboratory of Chemical Ecology and Insect Behavior,University of S?o Paulo, Escola Superior de Agricultura “Luiz de Queiroz”,Piracicaba,Brazil;2.Laboratory of Fundamental and Applied Research in Chemical Ecology (FARCE),University of Neuchatel, Institute of Biology,Neuchatel,Switzerland;3.Department of Molecular Ecology,Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology,Jena,Germany |
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Abstract: | Herbivore-induced plant volatiles are important host finding cues for larval parasitoids, and similarly, insect oviposition
might elicit the release of plant volatiles functioning as host finding cues for egg parasitoids. We hypothesized that egg
parasitoids also might utilize HIPVs of emerging larvae to locate plants with host eggs. We, therefore, assessed the olfactory
response of two egg parasitoids, a generalist, Trichogramma pretiosum (Tricogrammatidae), and a specialist, Telenomus remus (Scelionidae) to HIPVs. We used a Y-tube olfactometer to tests the wasps’ responses to volatiles released by young maize
plants that were treated with regurgitant from caterpillars of the moth Spodoptera frugiperda (Noctuidae) or were directly attacked by the caterpillars. The results show that the generalist egg parasitoid Tr. pretiosum is innately attracted by volatiles from freshly-damaged plants 0–1 and 2–3 h after regurgitant treatment. During this interval,
the volatile blend consisted of green leaf volatiles (GLVs) and a blend of aromatic compounds, mono- and homoterpenes, respectively.
Behavioral assays with synthetic GLVs confirmed their attractiveness to Tr. pretiosum. The generalist learned the more complex volatile blends released 6–7 h after induction, which consisted mainly of sesquiterpenes.
The specialist T. remus on the other hand was attracted only to volatiles emitted from fresh and old damage after associating these volatiles with
oviposition. Taken together, these results strengthen the emerging pattern that egg and larval parasitoids behave in a similar
way in that generalists can respond innately to HIPVs, while specialists seems to rely more on associative learning. |
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