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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Gainesville, Florida » Center for Medical, Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology » Chemistry Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #264863

Title: Eavesdropping on plant volatiles by a specialist moth: significance of ratio and concentration

Author
item CHA, DONG - Cornell University
item LINN JR., CHARLES - Cornell University
item Teal, Peter
item Zhang, Aijun
item ROELOFS, WENDELL - Cornell University
item LOEB, GREGORY - Cornell University

Submitted to: PLOS ONE
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 1/10/2011
Publication Date: 2/9/2011
Citation: Cha, D.A., Linn Jr., C.E., Teal, P.E., Zhang, A., Roelofs, W.L., Loeb, G.M. 2011. Eavesdropping on plant volatiles by a specialist moth: significance of ratio and concentration. PLoS One. 6(2):1-8.

Interpretive Summary: Insects commonly use chemicals for communication both as pheromones and as a means for finding hosts. It is well known that plants, serving as hosts for many insect pests, give off different aromas due to release of different blends of chemicals depending on stage of development, whether or not they are damaged, environmental conditions or their variety. Scientists from Department of Entomology, New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, Cornell University, Geneva, New York, the Chemistry Research Unit, Center for Medical, Agricultural and Veterinary Entomology, Agricultural Research Service, USDA-ARS, Gainesville, Florida, and the Invasive Insect Biocontrol and Behavior Laboratory, Plant Sciences Institute, USDA-ARS, Beltsville, Maryland have been studying how the grape Grape berry moth detects and responds to volatiles coming from grapes. They have discovered that grape plants release a suite of compounds common to many plant species but that specificity of the blend results from the ratio of key compounds in the blend. They also discovered that the moth can overcome significant variation in the ratio of some plant volatiles as well as large differences in concentrations of compounds in order to find the host plants. This dynamic ability to respond to different blends of attractants from hosts may be critical for insects to successfully find host plants for reproduction.

Technical Abstract: We investigated the role that the ratio and concentration of ubiquitous plant volatiles play in providing host specificity for the diet specialist grape berry moth Paralobesia viteana (Clemens) in the process of locating its primary host plant Vitis sp. In the first flight tunnel experiment, using a previously identified attractive blend with seven common but essential components (“optimized blend”), we found that doubling the amount of six compounds singly [(E)- & (Z)-linalool oxides, nonanal, decanal, ß-caryophyllene, or germacrene-D], while keeping the concentration of other compounds constant, significantly reduced female attraction (average 76% full and 59% partial upwind flight reduction) to the synthetic blends. However, doubling (E)-4,8-dimethyl 1,3,7-nonatriene had no effect on female response. In the second experiment, we manipulated the volatile profile more naturally by exposing clonal grapevines to Japanese beetle feeding. In the flight tunnel, foliar damage significantly reduced female landing on grape shoots by 72% and full upwind flight by 24%. The reduction was associated with two changes: (1) more than a two-fold increase in total amount of the seven essential volatile compounds, and (2) changes in their relative ratios. Compared to the optimized blend, synthetic blends mimicking the volatile ratio emitted by damaged grapevines resulted in an average of 87% and 32% reduction in full and partial upwind orientation, respectively, and the level of reduction was similar at both high and low doses. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the specificity of a ubiquitous volatile blend is determined, in part, by the ratio of key volatile compounds for this diet specialist. However, P. viteana was also able to accommodate significant variation in the ratio of some compounds as well as the concentration of the overall mixture. Such plasticity may be critical for phytophagous insects to successfully eavesdrop on variable host plant volatile signals.