The roles of juvenile hormone and biogenic amines on pheromone response plasticity and diapause termination in male Caloptilia fraxinella |
| |
Authors: | Joelle K Lemmen Maya L Evenden |
| |
Institution: | Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada |
| |
Abstract: | In insects that exhibit a period of delayed reproduction, the timing of mating and reproduction is controlled by environmental conditions that regulate endogenous factors such as hormones and biogenic amines (BAs). Caloptilia fraxinella (Ely) (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) undergoes a 9‐month reproductive diapause from adult eclosion in the summer until diapause termination the following spring when adults mate. Male response to female sex pheromone is plastic, and is most acute when moths are reproductively active. The aim of this study is to further elucidate the mechanisms involved in the regulation of male response to pheromone in C. fraxinella, and to test whether the application of BAs with and without a juvenile hormone analogue (JHA) to males in different physiological states impacts pheromone responsiveness, as measured by electroantennogram and wind tunnel bioassays. Treatment of male C. fraxinella in reproductive diapause with one application of a JHA induces the highest subsequent pheromone response in the fall, but does not alter pheromone response earlier in reproductive diapause in the summer. The JHAs methoprene and pyriproxyfen similarly enhance pheromone response in the fall. Treatment with methoprene alone or in combination with one of the BAs octopamine, dopamine or serotonin increases male pheromone responsiveness in the fall. The increase in pheromone response can be attributed to methoprene only, as treatment with any of the BAs alone does not enhance male response to pheromone. Biogenic amine treatment lowers male responsiveness to pheromone in some experiments, indicating that there may be a role for BAs in maintaining low pheromone response during reproductive diapause in this species. |
| |
Keywords: | methoprene pyriproxyfen reproductive diapause electroantennogram wind tunnel octopamine dopamine serotonin Lepidoptera Gracillariidae |
|
|