Journal
PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/plb.13516
Keywords
20-hydroxyecdysone; Aloka depressa; Diploclisia glaucescens; leafhopper; plant-insect interaction; sharpshooter
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This article reports a rare plant-insect interaction between the leafhopper Aloka depressa and the host liana, Diploclisia glaucescens. Field observations and SEM micrographs are used to provide evidence for this interaction. 20-Hydroxyecdysone, an insect moulting hormone, is detected and quantified in D. glaucescens. 20-Hydroxyecdysone is also found in the excrement of A. depressa. This association between the plant and insect is not damaging the host liana and showcases a unique plant-insect interaction.
Here we report a unique plant-insect interaction between the leafhopper Aloka depressa (tribe Phlogisini) and the host liana, Diploclisia glaucescens, from a Botanic Garden located at the southern edge of Western Ghats in India.Field observations and SEM micrographs were employed to derive evidences on this rare plant-insect interaction. 20-Hydroxyecdysone (20E), insect moulting hormone, was detected and quantified in the host plant D. glaucescens using HPTLC-densitometry. 20E was isolated and characterized from D. glaucescens using column chromatography, 1H-, 13C-NMR and HR-MS. 20E was also detected in A. depressa excrement using HPTLC-densitometry.The leafhopper A. depressa is functioning as a 'sharpshooter' drawing nutrients from the host liana, D. glaucescens, and flinging the waste fluid as droplets through their tail ends. SEM micrographs of A. depressa revealed its external morphological features, characteristic of a sharpshooter. We quantified 20E (0.44-1.44%, dry wt.) in various parts of D. glaucescens. 20E (1.47%, dry wt.) was also detected in the excrement of A. depressa.This plant (D. glaucescens)-insect (A. depressa) association crucially is not damaging the host liana. Considering the diseases caused by sharpshooting leafhoppers in the Americas, this association and the survival of the host plant (D. glaucescens) is illustrating a unique plant-insect interaction.
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