4.3 Article

Phoretic specialization on insect herbivores facilitates mite transportation to host plants

Journal

ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA
Volume 170, Issue 4, Pages 361-367

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eea.13140

Keywords

Acari; Blattisociidae; Cephaloleia; Chelobasis; chemical cues; commensalism; dispersal; host recognition; Lasioseius; phoresy; scent attraction; symbiosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Smithsonian Institution Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
  2. Smithsonian Global Earth Observatories Program
  3. Office of the Under Secretary for Science
  4. National Geographic/Waitt Institute [W149-11]
  5. Smithsonian Small Grants
  6. Smithsonian Institution Barcode Network Funds
  7. Smithsonian Pell Grant
  8. Organization for Tropical Studies ECTS Research Fellowship (ECTS-R)
  9. National Science Foundation-Dimensions in Biodiversity [1737778]
  10. Center of Biological Risk (CBR) Grant -University of Connecticut
  11. Division Of Environmental Biology
  12. Direct For Biological Sciences [1737778] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study focuses on the behavior of phoretic mites in selecting the correct host for habitat and mate selection. The results show that the Lasioseius mites are not strict specialists, but are able to detect and attach to beetle species that inhabit their host plant.
Phoresy, the use of another organism for dispersal, is one of the most intriguing commensalistic interactions. The selection of a correct host is fundamental for phoretic organisms to ensure arrival to suitable habitats and to encounter potential mates. This study focuses on a group of phoretic mites in the genus Lasioseius (Acari: Blattisociidae). In La Selva Biological Station, a tropical wet forest in Costa Rica, Lasioseius mites feed on nematodes inside the scrolls formed by the young leaves of their hosts, plants in the order Zingiberales. When leaves expand and unfurl, mites disperse to another rolled leaf by clinging onto 'rolled-leaf beetles', a group of insect herbivores specialized on Zingiberales (genera Cephaloleia and Chelobasis; Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). In this study, we determined whether Lasioseius mites associated with Cephaloleia belti Baly are specialized on this beetle species as a phoretic host. Mites may also be attracted to Chelobasis perplexa Baly, sharing the same host plant. Another possibility is that Lasioseius mites are opportunistic generalists and attach to rolled-leaf beetle species (e.g., Cephaloleia dorsalis Baly) that never share host plants with either C. belti or Ch. perplexa. In a laboratory setting, we tested whether mites preferred scents from and/or attached to particular beetle species. Scent attraction experiments showed that Lasioseius mites collected from C. belti were attracted to scents from C. belti and Ch. perplexa, but were not attracted to scents from C. dorsalis. Mites collected from C. belti attached to both C. belti and Ch. perplexa, but never to C. dorsalis. In conclusion, Lasioseius mites are not strict specialists, but are able to detect and attach to beetle species that inhabit their host plant.

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