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Experience-induced preference for oviposition repellents derived from a non-host plant by a specialist herbivore
Authors:Shu-Sheng Liu  Yue-Hong  Li  Yin-quan  Liu  Myron P Zalucki
Institution:Institute of Applied Entomology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, China; Department of Integrative Biology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Australia
Abstract:Foraging adults of phytophagous insects are attracted by host‐plant volatiles and supposedly repelled by volatiles from non‐host plants. In behavioural control of pest insects, chemicals derived from non‐host plants applied to crops are expected to repel searching adults and thereby reduce egg laying. How experience by searching adults of non‐host volatiles affects their subsequent searching and oviposition behaviour has been rarely tested. In laboratory experiments, we examined the effect of experience of a non‐host‐plant extract on the oviposition behaviour of the diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella, a specialist herbivore of cruciferous plants. Naive ovipositing DBM females were repelled by an extract of dried leaves of Chrysanthemum morifolium, a non‐host plant of DBM, but experienced females were not repelled. Instead they were attracted by host plants treated with the non‐host‐plant extract and laid a higher proportion of eggs on treated than on untreated host plants. Such behavioural changes induced by experience could lead to host‐plant range expansion in phytophagous insects and play an important role in determining outcome for pest management of some behavioural manipulation methods.
Keywords:Behavioural control              Brassica campestris                        Chrysanthemum morifolium            host range expansion              Plutella xylostella            semiochemicals
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