Department of Entomology, NYS Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell University, Geneva, NY 14456, USA.
J Chem Ecol. 2012 Mar;38(3):319-29. doi: 10.1007/s10886-012-0087-9. Epub 2012 Mar 8.
The apple maggot fly, Rhagoletis pomonella, infests apple (Malus domestica) and hawthorn species (most notably the downy hawthorn, Crataegus mollis) in the eastern USA. Evidence suggests that the fly was introduced into the western USA sometime in the last 60 years. In addition to apple, R. pomonella also infests two species of hawthorns in the western USA as major hosts: the native black hawthorn (C. douglasii) and the introduced ornamental English hawthorn, C. monogyna. Apple and downy hawthorn-origin flies in the eastern USA use volatile blends emitted from the surface of their respective ripening fruit to find and discriminate among host trees. To test whether the same is true for western flies, we used coupled gas chromatography and electroantennographic detection (GC-EAD) and developed a 7-component apple fruit blend for western apple-origin flies, an 8-component black hawthorn fruit blend for flies infesting C. douglasii, and a 9-component ornamental hawthorn blend for flies from C. monogyna. Crataegus douglasii and C. monogyna-origin flies showed similar levels of upwind directed flight to their respective natal synthetic fruit blends in flight tunnel assays compared to whole fruit adsorbent extracts, indicating that the blends contain all the behaviorally relevant fruit volatiles to induce maximal response levels. The black and ornamental hawthorn blends shared four compounds in common including 3-methylbutan-1-ol, which appears to be a key volatile for R. pomonella populations in the eastern, southern, and western USA that show a preference for fruit from different Crataegus species. However, the blends also differed from one another and from domesticated apple in several respects that make it possible that western R. pomonella flies behaviorally discriminate among fruit volatiles and form ecologically differentiated host races, as is the case for eastern apple and hawthorn flies.
苹果实蝇,Rhagoletis pomonella,侵袭美国东部的苹果(Malus domestica)和山楂物种(尤其是绒毛山楂,Crataegus mollis)。有证据表明,这种苍蝇是在过去 60 年中的某个时候被引入美国西部的。除了苹果,R. pomonella 还以两种美国西部的山楂物种为主要宿主:本地的黑山楂(C. douglasii)和引入的观赏英国山楂,C. monogyna。美国东部的苹果和绒毛山楂源苍蝇利用从各自成熟果实表面散发的挥发性混合物来寻找和区分宿主树。为了测试西部苍蝇是否也是如此,我们使用耦合气相色谱和触角电生理检测(GC-EAD)为来自 C. douglasii 的感染苍蝇开发了 7 种苹果果实混合物、8 种黑山楂果实混合物以及 9 种观赏山楂混合物用于来自 C. monogyna 的苍蝇。C. douglasii 和 C. monogyna 源苍蝇在飞行隧道试验中对各自的原生合成果实混合物表现出类似的顺风定向飞行水平,与整个果实吸附提取物相比,表明混合物包含所有与行为相关的果实挥发物,以诱导最大的反应水平。黑山楂和观赏山楂混合物共享四种共同化合物,包括 3-甲基-1-丁醇,它似乎是美国东部、南部和西部对来自不同山楂物种的果实表现出偏好的 R. pomonella 种群的关键挥发性化合物。然而,混合物在几个方面也彼此不同,并且与驯化苹果不同,这使得西部 R. pomonella 苍蝇有可能在行为上区分果实挥发物并形成生态分化的宿主种族,就像东部的苹果和山楂苍蝇一样。