Abstract

Suitability of plant tissues as food for insects varies from plant to plant. In lepidopteran insects, fitness is largely dependent on the host-finding ability of the females. Existing studies have suggested that polyphagous lepidopterans preferentially select certain host plant species for oviposition. However, the mechanisms for host recognition and selection have not been fully elucidated. For the polyphagous yellow peach moth Conogethes punctiferalis, we explored the effect of chestnut cultivar on the performance and fitness and addressed the mechanisms of plant-volatile-mediated host recognition. By carrying out laboratory experiments and field investigation on four chestnut Castanea mollissima cultivars (Huaihuang, Huaijiu, Yanhong, and Shisheng), we found that C. punctiferalis females preferentially select Huaijiu for oviposition and infestation, and caterpillars fed on Huaijiu achieved slightly greater fitness than those fed on the other three chestnut cultivars, indicating that Huaijiu was a better suitable host for C. punctiferalis. Plant volatiles played important roles in host recognition by C. punctiferalis. All seven chestnut volatile compounds, α-pinene, camphene, β-thujene, β-pinene, eucalyptol, 3-carene, and nonanal, could trigger EAG responses in C. punctiferalis. The ubiquitous plant terpenoids, α-pinene, camphene and β-pinene, and their specific combination at concentrations and proportions similar to the emissions from the four chestnut cultivars, was sufficient to elicit host recognition behavior of female C. punctiferalis. Nonanal and a mixture containing nonanal, that mimicked the emission of C. punctiferalis infested chestnut fruits, caused avoidance response. The outcome demonstrates the effects of chestnut cultivars on the performance of C. punctiferalis and reveals the preference-performance relationship between C. punctiferalis adults and their offspring. The observed olfactory plasticity in the plant-volatile-mediated host recognition may be important for the forming of the relationship between yellow peach moth and chestnuts since it allows the polyphagous herbivores to adjust to variation in volatile emission from their host plants.

Highlights

  • Phytophagous insects are generally associated with a particular plant or a constellation of plant species

  • We investigated the preference and performance of polyphagous C. punctiferalis on four chestnut cultivars, Huaihuang, Huaijiu, Yanhong, and Shisheng

  • We found that in field Huaijiu had higher infestation rate than the other three chestnut cultivars and in laboratory C. punctiferalis females chose to lay more eggs on Huaijiu than on the other three chestnut cultivars

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Summary

Introduction

Phytophagous insects are generally associated with a particular plant or a constellation of plant species. Even though polyphagous insects can be adaptive to a range of plant species, their fitness differs among various host plants [1]. Adult female lepidopterans have been shown to preferentially select certain host plant species for oviposition [3,4]. A prevailing hypothesis on oviposition preference is that a female will choose those hosts on which caterpillars perform best [5,6,7,8,9]. This preferenceperformance hypothesis has been clearly supported by a meta-analysis [10]. The underlying mechanisms of host recognition and selection remain elusive

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