Lilly Victoria Elliott-Vidaurri, Paola Olaya-Arenas, Katja Poveda
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Insects use volatile organic compounds (VOCs) as environmental cues for resource-searching. Volatile cues provide information that can attract pollinators and natural enemies or repel crop pests. Naturally occurring VOCs are valuable tools for controlling and monitoring pests as part of integrative pest management strategies. However, their effectiveness as monitoring tools depends on the surrounding context, emphasizing the importance of evaluating their performance within the specific conditions in which they will be deployed. Delia platura (Meigen), or seedcorn maggot, is a globally distributed pest, often feeding on seeds of legumes, allium, and cereal grains. Adults of this pest rely on olfaction when searching for oviposition sites. To determine which cues are more attractive for D. platura, and if the attraction to certain cues depends on the surrounding crop context, a 2-factorial blocked experiment was conducted to test the individual and combined effects of previously reported attractants (silage alfalfa, fresh alfalfa, manure, fish meal, bone meal, soil, a commercially available attractant and control soils) and at-risk crop species (field corn, soybean, and snap bean) on adult response. There were differences between attractants and seed types but no interactions. Traps containing silage alfalfa attracted more flies than the controls and the commercially available attractant. Traps containing corn attracted more flies than those containing soybean. These results indicate that D. platura uses volatile cues to differentiate among attractant sources and seed types, and that future management practices could use the same attractant across the 3 crop systems.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Insect Science was founded with support from the University of Arizona library in 2001 by Dr. Henry Hagedorn, who served as editor-in-chief until his death in January 2014. The Entomological Society of America was very pleased to add the Journal of Insect Science to its publishing portfolio in 2014. The fully open access journal publishes papers in all aspects of the biology of insects and other arthropods from the molecular to the ecological, and their agricultural and medical impact.