4.6 Article

Supplementing Blood Diet With Plant Nectar Enhances Egg Fertility in Stomoxys calcitrans

期刊

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.646367

关键词

Stomoxys calcitrans; nectar feeding; insect-plant interaction; fertility; larval emergence

资金

  1. Max Planck Institute icipe partner group
  2. United Kingdom's Foreign
  3. Commonwealth and Development Office
  4. Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
  5. Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
  6. Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
  7. Government of the Republic of Kenya
  8. Centre for International Migration and Development
  9. Combating Arthropod Pests for Better Health, Food and Resilience to Climate Change (CAP-Africa) [RAF-3058 KEN-18/0005]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The stable fly, a biting fly, feeds on both blood and plants, as shown by DNA evidence. Nectar supplementation from plants like Parthenium hysterophorus can enhance egg hatchability in stable flies, but does not affect egg laying or longevity. Various plants stable flies feed on have different scents, leading to varied behavioral responses in the flies.
Stomoxys calcitrans (stable fly) is a cosmopolitan biting fly of both medical and veterinary importance. Unlike blood-feeding-related behavior of stable fly, its plant feeding, the fitness value, and the S. calcitrans-plant interaction are less understood. Here we show based on two chloroplast DNA genes, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase large chain (rbcL) and the intergenic spacer gene trnH-psbA, that field-collected male and female stable flies fed on various plant species. We investigated the fitness cost of plant feeding using Parthenium hysterophorus, one of the plant species identified to have been fed on by the field-collected flies. Supplementation of blood feeding with a flowering P. hysterophorus plant as nectar source enhanced egg hatchability significantly as compared to blood alone, showing the fitness value of nectar supplementation. However, nectar supplementation did not affect the number of eggs laid or longevity of S. calcitrans as compared to flies that fed on blood alone. S. calcitrans maintained on sugar alone failed to lay eggs. The various plants stable flies fed on demonstrated chemodiversity with their own signature scent. The behavioral response of S. calcitrans to these signature compounds varied from strong attraction (gamma-terpinene) to neutral (linalool oxide and myrcene) to repellency (butanoic acid). Our study demonstrated that stable flies feed on nectar, and plant nectar supplementation of blood feeding enhanced larval emergence. Thus, our result has implication in stable fly reproduction, survival, disease transmission, boosting laboratory colony, and the possibility of using plant-derived odors for mass trapping of stable fly, for instance, using gamma-terpinene.

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