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Habitat cues synergize to elicit chemically mediated landing behavior in a specialist phytophagous insect,the grape berry moth
Authors:Michael S Wolfin  Ronald R Chilson III  Jonathan Thrall  Yuxi Liu  Sara Volo  Dong H Cha  Gregory M Loeb  Charles E Linn Jr
Institution:1. Department of Entomology, Cornell AgriTech at the New York Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell University, Geneva, NY, USA;2. Biology Department, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY, USA;3. USDA-ARS, Daniel K. Inouye US Pacific Basin Agricultural Research Center, Hilo, HI, USA
Abstract:Many phytophagous insects locate their host plant using mixtures of volatile compounds produced by the plant. A key behavior in the host location process that has been the focus of decades of behavioral research is optomotor anemotaxis. Another key step in host location is landing on (or near) the odor source. In previous work, rubber septa emitting a synthetic blend of volatiles extracted from young shoots of grape plants, Vitus spp. (Vitaceae), elicited equivalent levels of oriented upwind flight by female grape berry moths (GBM), Paralobesia viteana (Clemens) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), as did actual (control) grape shoots. However, in contrast to the shoots, females did not land on the odor source. In this study, we used flight tunnel assays to investigate the landing response of GBM females with respect to chemical and visual stimuli, as well as differences in relative humidity. When stimuli were presented individually, only the synthetic blend of host plant volatiles elicited equivalent levels of oriented upwind flight compared to the plants. Interestingly, wet cotton strips elicited low but consistent levels of upwind flight. In paired assays, only the synthetic blend paired with wet cotton strips elicited landing, although at significantly lower levels than that elicited by grape shoots. To achieve landing rates equivalent to live grape shoots, grape berry moth females required all three stimuli we tested: host odor cues, moisture, and visual cues simulating a grape shoot. These results suggest the cues have a synergistic effect, and that landing behavior requires complex sensory processing using multiple sensory inputs. Furthermore, these results suggest that moisture plays an important role in the host plant location process.
Keywords:insect semiochemicals  flight tunnel  habitat cues  relative humidity  visual cues  Paralobesia viteana  Tortricidae  Lepidoptera  anemotaxis  optomotor  landing response  synthetic blend
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