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  4. Effects of plant metabolites on the behavior and development of parasitic wasps

Effects of plant metabolites on the behavior and development of parasitic wasps

Author(s)
Turlings, Ted  
Laboratoire de recherches fondamentales et appliquées en écologie chimique  
Benrey, Betty  
Institut de biologie  
Date issued
1998
In
Ecoscience
Vol
3
No
5
From page
321
To page
333
Subjects
tri-trophic interaction parasitoids plant chemicals host location host suitability MICROPLITIS-CROCEIPES CRESSON NATURAL ENEMY ASSOCIATION RAPAE-BRASSICACEAE CRUCIFERAE PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTIONS 3 TROPHIC LEVELS HOST-PLANT COTESIA-CONGREGATA TRITROPHIC SYSTEM TOBACCO HORNWORM PIERIS-BRASSICAE
Abstract
Parasitoids are insects that spend their immature stages feeding from the tissues of other arthropods, eventually killing them. Many insects that serve as hosts for parasitoids are herbivorous, and metabolites from plants on which they feed can influence both the location of hosts by adult parasitoids and the development of the immature stages. For example, adult female parasitoids, which have the formidable task of locating often scarce and well-hidden hosts, may make effective use of chemical signals that plants emit in response to herbivory. The signals are used to guide them to herbivores that are damaging the plants. Also, plant-produced toxins along with digestibility reducers may slow down herbivore development, prolonging the time that they are vulnerable to parasitoids. The influence of plant chemicals continues after a parasitoid egg has been deposited in or on a host. An immature parasitoid uses the host as its sole source of nutrients. As the diet of hosts, plants can affect their development and physiological condition and thus, the overall suitability and quality of hosts as resources for parasitoid larvae. Here we give an overview of what is known about these interactions between plants and parasitoids and speculate on the possibility that parasitoids and other natural enemies of herbivorous arthropods may have, to some extent, contributed to the evolutionary pressures from which plant chemical traits have evolved.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/52023
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