Abstract
Summary (E)‐β‐Farnesene (EβF) is the predominant constituent of the alarm pheromone of most aphid pest species. Moreover, natural enemies of aphids use EβF to locate their aphid prey. Some plant species emit EβF, potentially as a defense against aphids, but field demonstrations are lacking.Here, we present field and laboratory studies of flower defense showing that ladybird beetles are predominantly attracted to young stage‐2 pyrethrum flowers that emitted the highest and purest levels of EβF. By contrast, aphids were repelled by EβF emitted by S2 pyrethrum flowers. Although peach aphids can adapt to pyrethrum plants in the laboratory, aphids were not recorded in the field.Pyrethrum's (E)‐β‐farnesene synthase (EbFS) gene is strongly expressed in inner cortex tissue surrounding the vascular system of the aphid‐preferred flower receptacle and peduncle, leading to elongated cells filled with EβF. Aphids that probe these tissues during settlement encounter and ingest plant EβF, as evidenced by the release in honeydew. These EβF concentrations in honeydew induce aphid alarm responses, suggesting an extra layer of this defense.Collectively, our data elucidate a defensive mimicry in pyrethrum flowers: the developmentally regulated and tissue‐specific EβF accumulation and emission both prevents attack by aphids and recruits aphid predators as bodyguards.
Highlights
Flowers are crucial for plant reproduction and, for Darwinian fitness
For the aphid dispersal assay, single M. persicae adults previously reared on N. benthamiana were inoculated on pyrethrum flowers and Chinese cabbage leaves for habituation and reproduction over at least 2 wk
In week 1 on average 0.77 ladybird beetles were found per plant, which at the local planting density corresponded to c. 100 000 beetles haÀ1
Summary
Flowers are crucial for plant reproduction and, for Darwinian fitness. plant defenses have been extensively studied, this mostly relates to the vegetative stage (Howe & Jander, 2008). Plants exploit mutualistic relationships with predators and parasitoids by inducing volatile organic compounds (VOCs) upon herbivore attack (Kessler & Baldwin, 2001) These natural enemies use induced plant VOCs to locate herbivores either based on rewarding experiences or by innate mechanisms (Kessler & Baldwin, 2001; Dicke & Baldwin, 2010), and herbivores often avoid these induced VOCs during host selection (Dicke & Baldwin, 2010; Bruce & Pickett, 2011). Among such VOCs, the plant-derived aphid alarm pheromone (E)-b-farnesene (EbF) (Vosteen et al, 2016) has a
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