Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves

We investigated whether cassava plants that are infested by the cassava mealybug, Phenacoccus herreni (Pseudococcidae, Sternorrhyncha), emit attractants for the encyrtid parasitoids Aenasius vexans Kerrich, Apoanagyrus (Epidinocarsis) diversicornis Howard, and Acerophagus coccois Smith. Bioassays wi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bertschy, C, Turlings, TCJ, Bellotti, Anthony C., Dorn, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43264
_version_ 1855530340483858432
author Bertschy, C
Turlings, TCJ
Bellotti, Anthony C.
Dorn, S.
author_browse Bellotti, Anthony C.
Bertschy, C
Dorn, S.
Turlings, TCJ
author_facet Bertschy, C
Turlings, TCJ
Bellotti, Anthony C.
Dorn, S.
author_sort Bertschy, C
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description We investigated whether cassava plants that are infested by the cassava mealybug, Phenacoccus herreni (Pseudococcidae, Sternorrhyncha), emit attractants for the encyrtid parasitoids Aenasius vexans Kerrich, Apoanagyrus (Epidinocarsis) diversicornis Howard, and Acerophagus coccois Smith. Bioassays with a Y-tube olfactometer showed for all three species that female wasps were most responsive and selective when they were 1.5 to 2.5 days old. Females of these age groups were used to test their ability to distinguish between the odor of plants with and without mealybugs. The wasps were offered choices between infested cassava leaves vs. healthy ones, infested leaves vs. clean air, and healthy leaves vs. clean air. A. vexans and A. diversicornis were strongly attracted to infested leaves and preferred these over healthy ones. In contrast, A. coccois was significantly attracted to either healthy or infested leaves, and did not distinguish between the two. The results suggest that A. coccois, which has the broadest known host range of the three, may be responsive only to general plant odors, while A. vexans and A. diversicornis respond more specifically to odors associated with mealybug infestation.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace43264
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1997
publishDateRange 1997
publishDateSort 1997
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace432642021-10-09T05:47:09Z Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves Bertschy, C Turlings, TCJ Bellotti, Anthony C. Dorn, S. manihot esculenta phenacoccus parasitoids natural enemies stimulants smell parasitoides enemigos naturales estimulantes olor We investigated whether cassava plants that are infested by the cassava mealybug, Phenacoccus herreni (Pseudococcidae, Sternorrhyncha), emit attractants for the encyrtid parasitoids Aenasius vexans Kerrich, Apoanagyrus (Epidinocarsis) diversicornis Howard, and Acerophagus coccois Smith. Bioassays with a Y-tube olfactometer showed for all three species that female wasps were most responsive and selective when they were 1.5 to 2.5 days old. Females of these age groups were used to test their ability to distinguish between the odor of plants with and without mealybugs. The wasps were offered choices between infested cassava leaves vs. healthy ones, infested leaves vs. clean air, and healthy leaves vs. clean air. A. vexans and A. diversicornis were strongly attracted to infested leaves and preferred these over healthy ones. In contrast, A. coccois was significantly attracted to either healthy or infested leaves, and did not distinguish between the two. The results suggest that A. coccois, which has the broadest known host range of the three, may be responsive only to general plant odors, while A. vexans and A. diversicornis respond more specifically to odors associated with mealybug infestation. 1997 2014-09-24T08:41:52Z 2014-09-24T08:41:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43264 en Open Access
spellingShingle manihot esculenta
phenacoccus
parasitoids
natural enemies
stimulants
smell
parasitoides
enemigos naturales
estimulantes
olor
Bertschy, C
Turlings, TCJ
Bellotti, Anthony C.
Dorn, S.
Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves
title Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves
title_full Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves
title_fullStr Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves
title_full_unstemmed Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves
title_short Chemically-mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug-infested cassava leaves
title_sort chemically mediated attraction of three parasitoid species to mealybug infested cassava leaves
topic manihot esculenta
phenacoccus
parasitoids
natural enemies
stimulants
smell
parasitoides
enemigos naturales
estimulantes
olor
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43264
work_keys_str_mv AT bertschyc chemicallymediatedattractionofthreeparasitoidspeciestomealybuginfestedcassavaleaves
AT turlingstcj chemicallymediatedattractionofthreeparasitoidspeciestomealybuginfestedcassavaleaves
AT bellottianthonyc chemicallymediatedattractionofthreeparasitoidspeciestomealybuginfestedcassavaleaves
AT dorns chemicallymediatedattractionofthreeparasitoidspeciestomealybuginfestedcassavaleaves