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Oviposition preference but not adult feeding preference matches with offspring performance in the bronze bug Thaumastocoris peregrinus
Authors:Gonzalo Martínez  María Victoria Finozzi  Gissel Cantero  Roxina Soler  Marcel Dicke  Andrés González
Institution:1. Laboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands;2. Laboratory of Entomology, National Forestry Research Program, Instituto Nacional de Investigación Agropecuaria, Tacuarembó, Uruguay;3. Laboratory of Chemical Ecology, Faculty of Chemistry, Universidad de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay;4. Plant‐Microbe Interactions, R&D Microbiology, Koppert Biological Systems, Berkel en Rodenrijs, The Netherlands
Abstract:Optimal foraging and optimal oviposition are two major forces leading to plant selection by insect females, but the contribution of these forces to the host‐selection process has been little studied for sucking herbivores. We studied feeding and oviposition behavior of a global pest, the bronze bug, Thaumastocoris peregrinus Carpintero & Dellapé (Heteroptera: Thaumastocoridae), using dual‐choice bioassays to evaluate the preference of females between host species, developmental leaf stage, or prior plant exposure to conspecifics. We assessed the link between these preferences and the performance of the offspring, by comparing survival and developmental time of nymphs reared on the various treatments. Finally, we compared the composition of the leaf wax of healthy and damaged leaves, and tested the effects of leaf wax on female preference behavior. Using healthy adult leaves of Eucalyptus tereticornis Sm. (Myrtaceae) as a reference, we found that females prefer to feed on Eucalyptus grandis W. Hill ex Maiden and E. tereticornis adult leaves that had been previously damaged by female conspecifics, whereas they reject juvenile leaves of E. tereticornis as food. Females also prefer to oviposit on leaves previously damaged by conspecifics but they rejected E. grandis as oviposition substrate. Nymphal performance varied among leaf treatments, suggesting a correlation with oviposition preference (but not feeding preference). Epicuticular wax extracts from damaged leaves contained higher concentrations of long‐chain, saturated linear alkanes, aldehydes, and alcohols than extracts from undamaged leaves. However, a choice assay failed to demonstrate an oviposition preference based on leaf surface wax chemistry. We discuss these findings in the context of the preference‐performance relationship.
Keywords:preference‐performance linkage  true bugs  host selection  mother‐knows‐best hypothesis  leaf epicuticular wax  forestry pest  Heteroptera  Thaumastocoridae  dual‐choice assay
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