Abstract
Recent investigations conducted on several tritrophic systems have demonstrated that egg parasitoids,
when searching for host eggs, may exploit plant synomones that have been induced as a consequence
of host oviposition. In this article we show that, in a system characterized by host eggs embedded in
the plant tissue, naı¨ve females of the egg parasitoid Anagrus breviphragma Soyka (Hymenoptera:
Mymaridae) responded in a Y-tube olfactometer to volatiles from leaves of Carex riparia Curtis
(Cyperaceae) containing eggs of one of its hosts, Cicadella viridis (L.) (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae). The
wasp did not respond to host eggs or to clean leaves from non-infested plants compared with clean
air, whereas it showed a strong preference for the olfactometer armcontaining volatiles of leaves with
embedded host eggs, compared with the arm containing volatiles of leaves from a non-infested plant
or host eggs extracted from the plant.When the eggs were removed from an infested leaf, the parasitoid
preference was observed only if eggs were added aside, suggesting a synergistic effect of a local
plant synomone and an egg kairomone. The parasitoid also responded to clean leaves from an egginfested
plant when compared with leaves from a non-infested plant, indicating a systemic effect of
volatile induction.
Lingua originale | English |
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pagine (da-a) | 311-316 |
Numero di pagine | 6 |
Rivista | Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata |
Volume | 144 |
DOI | |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2012 |
Pubblicato esternamente | Sì |
Keywords
- Carex riparia
- Cicadella viridis
- Cicadellidae
- Cyperaceae
- Hemiptera
- Hymenoptera
- Mymaridae
- VOCs
- host selection behaviour
- indirect plant defences
- induced synomones
- oviposition