4.4 Article

Interactions of Helicoverpa punctigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) Larvae and Adults With Four Native Host Plants Relative to Field Use Patterns

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
卷 50, 期 2, 页码 418-426

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ee/nvaa160

关键词

attraction; oviposition; performance; preference; survival

资金

  1. Entomological Society of Queensland

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This study found that generalist insect herbivores exhibit differences in host plant selection, with larvae showing higher survival rates on plants where more eggs were laid under experimental conditions. The attractiveness of different types of host plants to moths and caterpillars did not fully align, and oviposition was better correlated with larval survival rates than with larval attraction to host plants.
Generalist insect herbivores may be recorded from a great variety of host plants. Under natural conditions, however, they are almost invariably associated with a few primary host species on which most of the juveniles develop. We experimentally investigated the interaction of the generalist moth Helicoverpa punctigera Wallengren (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) with four of its native host plants, two designated primary hosts and two secondary hosts (based on field observations). We tested whether primary host plants support higher survival rates of larvae and whether they are more attractive to ovipositing moths and feeding larvae. We also evaluated whether relative attractiveness of host plants for oviposition matches larval survival rates on them-the preference-performance hypothesis. Moths laid significantly more eggs on two of the four host plant species, one of them a primary host, the other a secondary host. Larvae developed best when reared on the attractive secondary host, developed at intermediate levels on the two primary hosts, and performed worst on the less attractive secondary host. Relative attractiveness of the four host plants to caterpillars differed from that of the moths. Neither adult nor larval attraction to host plants fully supported the preference-performance hypothesis, but oviposition was better correlated with larval survival rates than was larval attraction. Our results suggest the relative frequency at which particular host species are used in the field may depend on factors not yet considered including the long-distance attractants used by moths and the relative distribution of host species.

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