4.2 Article

A preliminary histological investigation of gall induction in an unconventional galling system

Journal

ARTHROPOD-PLANT INTERACTIONS
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages 449-459

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11829-012-9193-4

Keywords

Coleoptera; Rhinusa pilosa; Linaria vulgaris; Insect gall; Ovipositional fluid

Funding

  1. British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources Operations
  2. University of Lethbridge
  3. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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In an unusual case involving a candidate biological control agent, the histologically complex stem galls of the weevil, Rhinusa pilosa (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) on yellow toadflax (Linaria vulgaris), are rapidly induced during oviposition and reach full size by larval hatch. To investigate gall induction, the oviposition behavior of R. pilosa was described. We experimentally disrupted ovipositing weevils at three key points in the oviposition sequence and compared host-plant tissue responses post disruption, to what occurs during normal gall induction using histological methods. De novo xylem production, intercellular spaces in the cortex, and hyperplasia and hypertrophy of the procambium and pith parenchyma surrounding the egg were some of the tissue- and cellular-level modifications observed only 3-5 days after normal oviposition. Normal gall development was not observed after any of the oviposition disruption treatments, although some of the cellular and tissue responses resembled those found after undisrupted oviposition. Feeding by the female during oviposition canal formation induced wound meristem and callus tissue formation, but no other modifications consistent with gall formation. When females were disrupted about 20 s into oviposition, a homogenously dense substance was observed, which was suspected to be ovipositional fluid. There was minor stem swelling 10 days later and histologically, periclinal cell divisions, de novo xylem, and pith cells with numerous stained plastids were observed as in normal gall development, thus suggesting that ovipositional fluid plays a role in gall induction.

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