首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Importance of contact chemical cues in host recognition and acceptance by the braconid larval endoparasitoids Cotesia sesamiae and Cotesia flavipes
Affiliation:1. Institute of Entomology, College of Agriculture, Guizhou University, Guizhou 550025, China;2. Guizhou Biological Institute, Guizhou 550009, China;3. Department of Entomology and Agricultural Zoology, Benaki Phytopathological Institute, 8 St. Delta Street, 145 61 Kifissia, Greece;4. Department of Chemical Biology, Xingyi Normal University for Nationalities, Xingyi, Guizhou 562400, China;1. Key Laboratory of Forest Disaster Warning and Control of Yunnan Province, Southwest Forestry University, Kunming 650224, China;2. Institute of Forestry Protection, Yunnan Academy of Forestry, Kunming 650204, China;3. Bureau of Forestry Pest Control and Quarantine of Yunnan Province, Kunming 650051, China;1. Altai State University, Lenina Av. 61, RF-656049 Barnaul, Russia;2. Tomsk State University, Institute of Biology, Ecology, Soil Science, Agriculture and Forestry, Lenina Av., 36, RF-634050, Tomsk, Russia;3. Tiergartenstrasse 27, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
Abstract:The ability of the congeneric braconid parasitoids Cotesia sesamiae (Cameron) and Cotesia flavipes Cameron to discriminate between stemborer larval cues upon contact was studied using their natural hosts, namely the noctuid Busseola fusca (Fuller) and the crambid Chilo partellus (Swinhoe), respectively, and the pyralid non-host Eldana saccharina (Walker). When the natural host larvae were washed in distilled water, parasitoid behavior was similar to that displayed when in contact with E. saccharina, characterized by the absence of ovipositor insertion. When washed host or non-host larvae were bathed with water extracts of their natural host, the parasitoids showed a significant increase in ovipositor insertions. However, the water extracts of host-larvae deposited on cotton wool balls did not induce ovipositor insertion in either C. sesamiae or C. flavipes. Nevertheless, the extracts enabled the parasitoids to discriminate between natural and non-hosts as indicated by the intensive antennating of the former. For both parasitoids, frass was found to be important in short-range host recognition as indicated by differences in the time spent on antennating between frass sources. In addition, the regurgitants of B. fusca and C. partellus induced ovipositor insertion in C. flavipes only. These results indicated that C. sesamiae and C. flavipes used different chemical cues for acceptation and oviposition in a stemborer larva, and that B. fusca and C. partellus shared the same chemical cues to induce oviposition in C. flavipes.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号