Effects of maternal diet on offspring fitness in the bird cherry‐oat aphid |
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Authors: | XIANG‐SHUN HU XIAO‐FENG LIU THOMAS JAMES RIDSDILL‐SMITH THOMAS THIEME HUI‐YAN ZHAO TONG‐XIAN LIU |
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Affiliation: | 1. State Key Laboratory for Crop Stress Biology, Key Laboratory of Northwest Loess Plateau Crop Pest Management of Ministry of Agriculture, Key Laboratory of Plant Protection Resources and Pest Management of Ministry of Education, College of Plant Protection, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, China;2. School of Animal Biology, Institute of Agriculture MO92, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Australia;3. BTL Bio‐Test Labour GmbH Sagerheide, Thulendorf, Germany |
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Abstract: | 1. Maternal and offspring diet effects on life‐history traits of the bird cherry‐oat aphid Rhopalosiphum padi were tested on three wheat varieties. Using nine reciprocal combinations of wheat varieties, the effects of previous experience (maternal diet effect) on the aphid's response to resistant and susceptible varieties (offspring diet effect) were tested. Batis was susceptible, and Xiaoyan22 and Ww2730 were both resistant, but with different mechanisms. 2. Aphids produced the most alatae in the treatments with the most resistant maternal diet variety Xiaoyan22. The fecundity (F) and intrinsic rate of increase (rm) of these alatae were at their greatest in the most resistant offspring diet variety, but these traits were not influenced in the apterae. 3. There were significant interactions in the alatae production and apterae life‐history traits, such as rm, development time, weight gain, and mean relative growth rate, between the maternal and offspring diet varieties. The interactions in apterae responses between varieties, some of which were reciprocal, indicated phenotypic plasticity in these parthenogenetic aphids. 4. Rhopalosiphum padi produced more alatae on the most resistant variety; the alatae would disperse and were more fecund. The growth responses of the apterae showed phenotypic plasticity to the different combinations of maternal and offspring diet varieties. The phenotypic plasticity would allow R. padi to better utilise the variable environments represented by the small wheat plots of different varieties in China. |
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Keywords: | Host wheat variety maternal effect offspring effect phenotypic plasticity Rhopalosiphum padi |
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