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Attraction of Three Mirid Predators to Tomato Infested by Both the Tomato Leaf Mining Moth <Emphasis Type="Italic">Tuta absoluta</Emphasis> and the Whitefly <Emphasis Type="Italic">Bemisia tabaci</Emphasis>
Authors:Diego B Silva  Vanda H P Bueno  Joop J A Van Loon  Maria Fernanda G V Peñaflor  José Maurício S Bento  Joop C Van Lenteren
Affiliation:1.Department of Entomology,Federal University of Lavras (UFLA),Lavras,Brazil;2.Luiz de Queiroz College of Agriculture (USP/ESALQ), Department of Entomology and Acarology,University of Sao Paulo,Piracicaba,Brazil;3.Laboratory of Entomology,Wageningen University,Wageningen,The Netherlands
Abstract:Plants emit volatile compounds in response to insect herbivory, which may play multiple roles as defensive compounds and mediators of interactions with other plants, microorganisms and animals. Herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) may act as indirect plant defenses by attracting natural enemies of the attacking herbivore. We report here the first evidence of the attraction of three Neotropical mirid predators (Macrolophus basicornis, Engytatus varians and Campyloneuropsis infumatus) toward plants emitting volatiles induced upon feeding by two tomato pests, the leaf miner Tuta absoluta and the phloem feeder Bemisia tabaci, in olfactometer bioassays. Subsequently, we compared the composition of volatile blends emitted by insect-infested tomato plants by collecting headspace samples and analyzing them with GC-FID and GC-MS. Egg deposition by T. absoluta did not make tomato plants more attractive to the mirid predators than uninfested tomato plants. Macrolophus basicornis is attracted to tomato plants infested with either T. absoluta larvae or by a mixture of B. tabaci eggs, nymphs and adults. Engytatus varians and C. infumatus responded to volatile blends released by tomato plants infested with T. absoluta larvae over uninfested plants. Also, multiple herbivory by T. absoluta and B. tabaci did not increase the attraction of the mirids compared to infestation with T. absoluta alone. Terpenoids represented the most important class of compounds in the volatile blends and there were significant differences between the volatile blends emitted by tomato plants in response to attack by T. absoluta, B. tabaci, or by both insects. We, therefore, conclude that all three mirids use tomato plant volatiles to find T. absoluta larvae. Multiple herbivory did neither increase, nor decrease attraction of C. infumatus, E. varians and M. basicornis. By breeding for higher rates of emission of selected terpenes, increased attractiveness of tomato plants to natural enemies may improve the effectiveness of biological control.
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