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  4. Tsetse flies are attracted to the invasive plant Lantana camara

Tsetse flies are attracted to the invasive plant Lantana camara

Author(s)
Syed, Zainulabeudin
Guerin, Patrick  
Institut de biologie  
Date issued
2004
In
Journal of Insect Physiology
Vol
1
No
50
From page
43
To page
50
Subjects
tsetse insect vector Glossina Lantana camara sensory ecology AMBLYOMMA-VARIEGATUM GLOSSINA-PALLIDIPES SLEEPING SICKNESS MORTALITY-RATES PSILA-ROSAE CARROT FLY DIPTERA IDENTIFICATION 1-OCTEN-3-OL PLANTATIONS
Abstract
In tsetse both sexes feed exclusively on the blood of vertebrates for a few minutes every 2-3 days. Tsetse flies seek cover from high temperatures to conserve energy and plants provide shelter for tsetse in all the biotopes they occupy. Recently, tsetse have taken cover in plantations and under the invasive bush Lantana camara that has invaded large areas of the tsetse fly belt of Africa. Flies from such refugia are implicated in sleeping sickness epidemics. In a wind tunnel we show that both foliage and an extract of volatiles from foliage of L. camara attract three tsetse spp. from different habitats: Glossina fascipes fuscipes (riverine), G. brevipalpis (sylvatic) and G. pallidipes (savannah). Gas chromatography analysis of volatiles extracted from leaves and flowers of L. camara coupled to electroantennograme recordings show that 1-octen-3-ol and beta-caryophyllene are the major chemostimuli for the antennal receptor cells of the three tsetse spp. studied. A binary mixture of these products attracted these flies in the wind tunnel. The gas chromatography linked electroantennograme analysis of the L. camara extracts also show that the antennal receptor cells of the three tsetse spp. respond similarly to groups of volatiles derived from the major biosynthetic and catabolic pathways of plants, i.e. to mono- and sesquiterpenes, to lipoxidation products and to aromatics. Mixtures of these plant volatiles also attracted tsetse in the wind tunnel. These findings show that tsetse flies have conserved a strong sensitivity to volatile secondary products of plants, underlining the fundamental role of vegetation in tsetse survival. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/55047
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