4.5 Article

A genetic basis for the manipulation of sink-source relationships by the galling aphid Pemphigus batae

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 167, Issue 3, Pages 711-721

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-011-2033-x

Keywords

Host plant genetics; Pemphigus betae; Populus angustifolia; Phloem parasites; Translocation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Sigma Xi
  3. Bilby Research Center and Organized Research of Northern Arizona University
  4. Merriam-Powell Center for Environmental Research
  5. Utah Power and Light Co.

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We examined how the galling aphid Pemphigus batae manipulates resource translocation patterns of resistant and susceptible narrowleaf cottonwood Populus angustifolia. Using carbon-14 (C-14)-labeling experiments in common garden trials, five patterns emerged. First, although aphid galls on resistant and susceptible genotypes did not differ in their capacity to intercept assimilates exported from the leaf they occupied, aphids sequestered 5.8-fold more assimilates from surrounding leaves on susceptible tree genotypes compared to resistant genotypes. Second, gall sinks on the same side of a shoot as a labeled leaf were 3.4-fold stronger than gall sinks on the opposite side of a shoot, which agrees with patterns of vascular connections among leaves of the same shoot (orthostichy). Third, plant genetic-based traits accounted for 26% of the variation in sink strength of gall sinks and 41% of the variation in sink strength of a plant's own bud sinks. Fourth, tree susceptibility to aphid gall formation accounted for 63% of the variation in C-14 import, suggesting strong genetic control of sink-source relationships. Fifth, competition between two galls was observed on a susceptible but not a resistant tree. On the susceptible tree distal aphids intercepted 1.5-fold more C-14 from the occupied leaf than did basal aphids, but basal aphids compensated for the presence of a distal competitor by almost doubling import to the gall from surrounding leaves. These findings and others, aimed at identifying candidate genes for resistance, argue the importance of including plant genetics in future studies of the manipulation of translocation patterns by phytophageous insects.

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