Abstract

Some insects use host and mate cues, including odor, color, and shape, to locate and recognize their preferred hosts and mates. Previous research has shown that the Asian longicorn beetle, Anoplophora glabripennis (Motschulsky), uses olfactory cues to locate host plants and differentiate them from non-host plants. However, whether A. glabripennis adults use visual cues or a combination of visual and olfactory cues remains unclear. In this study, we tested the host location and recognition behavior in A. glabripennis, which infests a number of hardwood species and causes considerable economic losses in North America, Europe and Asia. We determined the relative importance of visual and olfactory cues from Acer negundo in host plant location and recognition, as well as in the discrimination of non-host plants (Sabina chinensis and Pinus bungeana), by female and male A. glabripennis. Visual and olfactory cues from the host plants (A. negundo), alone and combined, attracted significantly more females and males than equivalent cues from non-host plants (S. chinensis and P. bungeana). Furthermore, the combination of visual and olfactory cues of host plants attracted more adults than either cue alone, and visual cues alone attracted significantly more adults than olfactory cues alone. This finding suggests that adult A. glabripennis has an innate preference for the visual and/or olfactory cues of its host plants (A. negundo) over those of the non-host plant and visual cues are initially more important than olfactory cues for orientation; furthermore, this finding also suggests that adults integrate visual and olfactory cues to find their host plants. Our results indicate that different modalities of host plant cues should be considered together to understand fully the communication between host plants and Asian longhorned beetles.

Highlights

  • Phytophagous insects discriminate and recognize host plants and mates based on multiple cues, such as odor, color, size and shape [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • When testing combined cues from A. negundo against those of S. chinensis and P. bungeana, adults oriented more frequently first towards the sector that contained combined cues of host plants A. negundo than towards the other sector that contained those of non-host plants, S. chinensis and P. bungeana (Table 1)

  • Adult A. glabripennis showed a clear preference in their total responses for cues of their host plant A. negundo over those of non-host plants

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Summary

Introduction

Phytophagous insects discriminate and recognize host plants and mates based on multiple cues, such as odor (olfactory cues), color, size and shape (visual cues) [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The longicorn beetles comprise more than 35,000 species in approximately 4,000 genera, and many species are important pests of forest, plantation, shelter forest and urban trees. Their host plants include hardwoods, coniferous trees, live trees and dying or dead wood [14]. Visual and olfactory cues were used by adult A. glabripennis to locate and recognize their preferred mates [16,17,18,19,20]. Some longicorn beetles utilize visual, olfactory or other cues, singly or combined, to find and recognize their mates

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