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  4. Fungal infection reduces herbivore-induced plant volatiles of maize but does not affect naive parasitoids

Fungal infection reduces herbivore-induced plant volatiles of maize but does not affect naive parasitoids

Author(s)
Rostas, Michael
Ton, Jurriaan
Mauch-Mani, Brigitte  
Laboratoire de biologie moléculaire et cellulaire  
Turlings, Ted  
Laboratoire de recherches fondamentales et appliquées en écologie chimique  
Date issued
2006
In
Journal of Chemical Ecology
Vol
9
No
32
From page
1897
To page
1909
Subjects
Cotesia marginiventris cross effects fungus induced indirect defense Microplitis rufiventris parasitoids Spodoptera littoralis tritrophic interactions volatiles Zea mays SPODOPTERA-EXIGUA JASMONIC ACID BEET ARMYWORM ZEA-MAYS COTESIA-MARGINIVENTRIS BENEFICIAL INSECTS METHYL SALICYLATE PEANUT PLANTS CORN PLANTS RESPONSES
Abstract
Plants attacked by insects release volatile compounds that attract the herbivores' natural enemies. This so-called indirect defense is plastic and may be affected by an array of biotic and abiotic factors. We investigated the effect of fungal infection as a biotic stress agent on the emission of herbivore-induced volatiles and the possible consequences for the attraction of two parasitoid species. Maize seedlings that were simultaneously attacked by the fungus Setosphaeria turcica and larvae of Spodoptera littoralis emitted a blend of volatiles that was qualitatively similar to the blend emitted by maize that was damaged by only the herbivore, but there was a clear quantitative difference. When simultaneously challenged by fungus and herbivore, the maize plants emitted in total 47% less of the volatiles. Emissions of green leaf volatiles were unaffected. In a six-arm olfactometer, the parasitoids Cotesia marginiventris and Microplitis rufiventris responded equally well to odors of herbivore-damaged and fungus- and herbivore-damaged maize plants. Healthy and fungus-infected plants were not attractive. An additional experiment showed that the performance of S. littoralis caterpillars was not affected by the presence of the pathogen, nor was there an effect on larvae of M. rufiventris developing inside the caterpillars. Our results confirm previous indications that naive wasps may respond primarily to the green leaf volatiles.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/52572
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