4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Leaf surface wax layers of Brassicaceae lack feeding stimulants for Phaedon cochleariae

Journal

ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA
Volume 115, Issue 1, Pages 41-50

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1570-7458.2005.00242.x

Keywords

Coleoptera Chrysomelidae; glucosinolate; Phaedon cochleariae; stimulant; surface; extraction method; cuticular wax; Brassica napus; Nasturtium officinale

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Numerous reports have indicated that glucosinolates are important stimulants for specialist herbivores feeding on Brassicaceae, and that these metabolites might be present on the plant surface and thereby detectable by an alighting insect. We investigated the outermost layer of leaves of two species of Brassicaceae, Brassica napus L. var. 'Martina' and Nasturtium officinale R. Br., using two highly selective extraction methods. When the epicuticular wax layer was mechanically removed with gum arabic, no glucosinolates were detectable in the lower and upper leaf surfaces. Extracting the leaf surfaces with a threefold short rinse with chloroform/methanol/water (2 : 1 : 1 vol/vol/vol) led to varying results, depending on the light conditions under which plants had been kept in the period prior to extraction. In plants kept under light, glucosinolates were detectable in a first extraction in minor concentrations, with increasing amounts in a second and third extraction. In plants kept in darkness, glucosinolates were almost absent in the first extraction. We postulate that the polar glucosinolates are washed from the inner leaf tissue through open stomata to the outside during solvent extraction, but are not naturally present in the outermost wax layer. The response of the crucifer specialist Phaedon cochleariae (F.) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) to leaf surfaces of the host plants B. napus and N. officinale and to a glucosinolate was tested. Adults preferred both the adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces of host plants that had been treated with gum arabic in order to remove the epicuticular waxes over intact surfaces. Waxes may therefore prevent direct contact with the stimulants. Sinigrin (allyl glucosinolate) and/or surface extracts of N. officinale leaves applied on Pisum sativum leaf discs did not evoke feeding, but feeding did occur when total leaf extracts of B. napus or N. officinale were applied on this non-host. We conclude that glucosinolates might only act as feeding stimulants for P. cochleariae in concert with compounds other than surface waxes.

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