学位论文详细信息
Interactions Between a Specialist and Generalist Moth and Their Host Plants
fruit abscission;Physalis angulata;plant-herbivore interactions;Heliothis virescens;Heliothis subflexa;plant induced responses;Physalis pubescens;host-plant location
Petzold, JenniferLee ; Wendy Boss, Committee Co-Chair,Ed Vargo, Committee Member,Thomas Wentworth, Committee Member,Fred Gould, Committee Co-Chair,Petzold, JenniferLee ; Wendy Boss ; Committee Co-Chair ; Ed Vargo ; Committee Member ; Thomas Wentworth ; Committee Member ; Fred Gould ; Committee Co-Chair
University:North Carolina State University
关键词: fruit abscission;    Physalis angulata;    plant-herbivore interactions;    Heliothis virescens;    Heliothis subflexa;    plant induced responses;    Physalis pubescens;    host-plant location;   
Others  :  https://repository.lib.ncsu.edu/bitstream/handle/1840.16/3702/etd.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
美国|英语
来源: null
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Among the most significant issues regarding plant-herbivore interactions today are 1) elucidating the genetic architecture of host plant use and determining what factors are involved in locating and ovipositing on host plants, 2) understanding chemical interactions between insects and their host plants, and 3) understanding how plants evolve in response to the ecological pressures imposed on them by their insect pests, and how these insects in turn respond to these evolved mechanisms of host plant defense. The purpose of this research was to address these questions using a model system composed of two Heliothine moths, Heliothis subflexa and H. virescens.Heliothis subflexa (Hs) is a specialist that feeds only on plants in the genus Physalis, while H. virescens (Hv) is a broad generalist.To determine what genetic factors are involved in changes in host range, these two species were hybridized, and backcrosses to both parent species were produced.Larval feeding preference of Hs, Hv, and backcross lines was assessed using choice and no choice feeding tests on Physalis and tobacco (a host of Hv), and oviposition behavior was assessed by observing moths in a large outdoor cage containing Physalis and tobacco.We found that backcrosses in the Hs direction always resembled Hs in feeding and oviposition preference.Backcrosses in the Hv direction resembled Hv in oviposition behavior, but had intermediate feeding behavior and fed on both Physalis and tobacco.Hybrids showed strong preference for tobacco in oviposition behavior.These results show that at least one major locus is likely involved in feeding preference between the two host plants and that preference for Physalis is a dominant trait; however, genetic control of oviposition behavior on the two host species is more complicated to understand, possibly involving multiple genetic loci and a threshold effect, or few genes and a heterozygous disadvantage.Field experiments were also conducted to determine how Hs locates its host plants.Results showed that vision is an important host location cue, and confirmed prior studies that showed that Hs lays approximately 20% of its eggs on nearby non-hosts.A possible reason for this could be to avoid host plant defenses Physalis plants were observed to respond to eggs of Hs; they do so by forming undifferentiated cells or a hypersensitive response directly under some Hs eggs. Laboratory and field studies demonstrated that eggs that elicited a response had a 25% lower probability of hatching, and a 28% lower probability of remaining on the plant.This resulted in a fitness cost of 18% for Hs, and it was concluded that response to eggs could be a factor that selected for non-host oviposition by Hs. Plants in this genus have also evolved to abscise fruits in response to fruigivory by Hs, but the degree to which chemical interactions are involved in this defense response was unknown.By using a combination of mechanical damage, natural damage, and Hs saliva and regurgitant treatments applied to fruit, it was determined that mechanical damage was sufficient to cause fruit abscission and insect oral secretions were not important in this response.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
Interactions Between a Specialist and Generalist Moth and Their Host Plants 6056KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:18次 浏览次数:19次