Neveu N, Grandgirard J, Nenon J P, Cortesero A M
Laboratoire d 'Ecobiologie des Insectes Parasitoïdes, Université de Rennes I, France.
J Chem Ecol. 2002 Sep;28(9):1717-32. doi: 10.1023/a:1020500915728.
When attacked by herbivorous insects, many plants emit volatile compounds that are used as cues by predators and parasitoids foraging for prey or hosts. While such interactions have been demonstrated in several host-plant complexes, in most studies, the herbivores involved are leaf-feeding arthropods. We studied the long-range plant volatiles involved in host location in a system based on a very different interaction since the herbivore is a fly whose larvae feed on the roots of cole plants in the cabbage root fly, Delia radicum L. (Diptera: Anthomyiidae). The parasitoid studied is Trybliographa rapae Westwood (Hymenoptera: Figitidae), a specialist larval endoparasitoid of D. radicum. Using a four-arm olfactometer, the attraction of naive T. rapae females toward uninfested and infested turnip plants was investigated. T. rapae females were not attracted to volatiles emanating from uninfested plants, whether presented as whole plants. roots, or leaves. In contrast, they were highly attracted to volatiles emitted by roots infested with D. radicum larvae, by undamaged parts of infested roots, and by undamaged leaves of infested plants. The production of parasitoid-attracting volatiles appeared to be systemic in this particular tritrophic system. The possible factors triggering this volatile emission were also investigated. Volatiles from leaves of water-stressed plants and artificially damaged plants were not attractive to T. rapae females, while volatiles emitted by leaves of artificially damaged plants treated with crushed D. radicum larvae were highly attractive. However, T. rapae females were not attracted to volatiles emitted by artificially damaged plants treated only with crushed salivary glands from D. radicum larvae. These results demonstrate the systemic production of herbivore-induced volatiles in this host-plant complex. Although the emission of parasitoid attracting volatiles is induced by factors present in the herbivorous host, their exact origin remains unclear. The probable nature of the volatiles involved and the possible origin of the elicitor of volatiles release are discussed.
当受到食草昆虫攻击时,许多植物会释放挥发性化合物,这些化合物被捕食者和寄生蜂用作寻找猎物或宿主的线索。虽然这种相互作用已在几种寄主植物复合体中得到证实,但在大多数研究中,涉及的食草动物是取食叶片的节肢动物。我们研究了一个基于非常不同相互作用的系统中参与寄主定位的远程植物挥发物,因为这种食草动物是一种蝇,其幼虫以甘蓝根蝇(Delia radicum L.,双翅目:花蝇科)的甘蓝类植物根为食。所研究的寄生蜂是菜根蝇茧蜂(Trybliographa rapae Westwood,膜翅目:长尾小蜂科),它是甘蓝根蝇的一种专性幼虫内寄生蜂。使用四臂嗅觉仪,研究了未接触过寄生蜂的菜根蝇茧蜂雌蜂对未受侵染和受侵染芜菁植株的趋性。菜根蝇茧蜂雌蜂对未受侵染植株释放的挥发物没有趋性,无论这些挥发物是以整株植物、根还是叶的形式呈现。相比之下,它们对被甘蓝根蝇幼虫侵染的根释放的挥发物、被侵染根的未受损部分以及被侵染植株的未受损叶片释放的挥发物有高度趋性。在这个特定的三营养系统中,吸引寄生蜂的挥发物的产生似乎是系统性的。我们还研究了触发这种挥发物释放的可能因素。水分胁迫植株和人工损伤植株叶片释放的挥发物对菜根蝇茧蜂雌蜂没有吸引力,而用碾碎的甘蓝根蝇幼虫处理过的人工损伤植株叶片释放的挥发物极具吸引力。然而,菜根蝇茧蜂雌蜂对仅用碾碎的甘蓝根蝇幼虫唾液腺处理过的人工损伤植株释放的挥发物没有趋性。这些结果证明了在这个寄主植物复合体中食草动物诱导的挥发物的系统性产生。虽然吸引寄生蜂的挥发物的释放是由食草寄主中存在的因素诱导的,但其确切来源仍不清楚。文中讨论了所涉及挥发物的可能性质以及挥发物释放诱导物的可能来源。