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Evidence for long-distance, chemical gall induction by an insect
Authors:Stephanie L. Sopow  Joseph D. Shorthouse  Ward Strong   Dan T. Quiring
Affiliation:Population Ecology Group, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management, University of New Brunswick, New Brunswick E3B 6C2, Canada;Department of Biology, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, P3E 2C6, Canada;Pest Management Group, British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Kalamalka Forestry Center, Vernon, BC, V1B 2C7, Canada;Population Ecology Group, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB, E3B 6C2, Canada
Abstract:Abstract We report that a chemical stimulus from a herbivore, a galling insect, changes plant morphology and physiology to benefit the herbivore. Previous studies could not determine whether insect galls are induced by mechanical or chemical stimuli because feeding and oviposition both occurred at the site of gall formation. We report that the mouthparts of a spruce‐galling insect, Adelges cooleyi, were inserted in stem phloem cells far from induced galls, that tissues between mouthparts and galls appeared normal, and that the ability to initiate galls was inversely correlated with distance from buds (potential gall sites). Thus the effects of chemical stimuli were unambiguously separated from any mechanical influence of probing stylets or ovipositors. Our results strongly suggest that galls were induced by a chemical stimulus transported to buds via vascular tissue and that its efficacy was dose‐dependent.
Keywords:Adelgids    gall induction    galler performance    host plant amelioration    induced plant responses    insect–plant interactions
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