Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis

The warty cabbage Bunias orientalis is an invasive pest in much of central Europe, including much of Germany since the 1980s, whereas in other countries, such as The Netherlands, it is a less common exotic species. Here, healthy larvae of Mamestra brassicae, which has been found feeding on B. orientalis plants in Germany, and larvae parasitized by one of its major larval endoparasitoids Microplitis mediator, were reared on both herbivoreinduced and noninduced leaves of B. orientalis originating from single large populations growing in The Netherlands and central Germany. Herbivore performance was less negatively affected than parasitoid performance by differences in plant quality. Development times in both M. brassicae and Mi. mediator were shorter on Dutch than German plants and also shorter on noninduced than induced plants. Moreover, survival and body size of the parasitoid was more strongly affected by plant population and induction than survival of healthy M. brassicae. Chemical analyses of defensive secondary metabolites [glucosinolates (GS)] revealed that concentrations of the major GS sinalbin were constitutively expressed in German plants whereas they were induced in Dutch plants. However, in separate feeding bioassays in which preference for induced and noninduced leaves was compared separately, L3 instars of M. brassicae preferred noninduced German plants over Dutch plants but induced Dutch plants over German plants, revealing that changes in primary metabolites or an unidentified non-GS compound mediates population- related differences in plant quality. The results reveal asymmetric effects of plant quality in exotic plants on organisms in the second and third trophic level.

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Main Authors: Harvey, J.A., Gols, R.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:4 trophic levels, biological-control, bottom-up, chemistry, cotesia-congregata, evolution, host, insect herbivores, plant allelochemicals, strategies,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/development-of-mamestra-brassicae-and-its-solitary-endoparasitoid
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-4097232025-01-21 Harvey, J.A. Gols, R. Article/Letter to editor Population Ecology 53 (2011) 4 ISSN: 1438-3896 Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis 2011 The warty cabbage Bunias orientalis is an invasive pest in much of central Europe, including much of Germany since the 1980s, whereas in other countries, such as The Netherlands, it is a less common exotic species. Here, healthy larvae of Mamestra brassicae, which has been found feeding on B. orientalis plants in Germany, and larvae parasitized by one of its major larval endoparasitoids Microplitis mediator, were reared on both herbivoreinduced and noninduced leaves of B. orientalis originating from single large populations growing in The Netherlands and central Germany. Herbivore performance was less negatively affected than parasitoid performance by differences in plant quality. Development times in both M. brassicae and Mi. mediator were shorter on Dutch than German plants and also shorter on noninduced than induced plants. Moreover, survival and body size of the parasitoid was more strongly affected by plant population and induction than survival of healthy M. brassicae. Chemical analyses of defensive secondary metabolites [glucosinolates (GS)] revealed that concentrations of the major GS sinalbin were constitutively expressed in German plants whereas they were induced in Dutch plants. However, in separate feeding bioassays in which preference for induced and noninduced leaves was compared separately, L3 instars of M. brassicae preferred noninduced German plants over Dutch plants but induced Dutch plants over German plants, revealing that changes in primary metabolites or an unidentified non-GS compound mediates population- related differences in plant quality. The results reveal asymmetric effects of plant quality in exotic plants on organisms in the second and third trophic level. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/development-of-mamestra-brassicae-and-its-solitary-endoparasitoid 10.1007/s10144-011-0267-4 https://edepot.wur.nl/178633 4 trophic levels biological-control bottom-up chemistry cotesia-congregata evolution host insect herbivores plant allelochemicals strategies Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic 4 trophic levels
biological-control
bottom-up
chemistry
cotesia-congregata
evolution
host
insect herbivores
plant allelochemicals
strategies
4 trophic levels
biological-control
bottom-up
chemistry
cotesia-congregata
evolution
host
insect herbivores
plant allelochemicals
strategies
spellingShingle 4 trophic levels
biological-control
bottom-up
chemistry
cotesia-congregata
evolution
host
insect herbivores
plant allelochemicals
strategies
4 trophic levels
biological-control
bottom-up
chemistry
cotesia-congregata
evolution
host
insect herbivores
plant allelochemicals
strategies
Harvey, J.A.
Gols, R.
Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis
description The warty cabbage Bunias orientalis is an invasive pest in much of central Europe, including much of Germany since the 1980s, whereas in other countries, such as The Netherlands, it is a less common exotic species. Here, healthy larvae of Mamestra brassicae, which has been found feeding on B. orientalis plants in Germany, and larvae parasitized by one of its major larval endoparasitoids Microplitis mediator, were reared on both herbivoreinduced and noninduced leaves of B. orientalis originating from single large populations growing in The Netherlands and central Germany. Herbivore performance was less negatively affected than parasitoid performance by differences in plant quality. Development times in both M. brassicae and Mi. mediator were shorter on Dutch than German plants and also shorter on noninduced than induced plants. Moreover, survival and body size of the parasitoid was more strongly affected by plant population and induction than survival of healthy M. brassicae. Chemical analyses of defensive secondary metabolites [glucosinolates (GS)] revealed that concentrations of the major GS sinalbin were constitutively expressed in German plants whereas they were induced in Dutch plants. However, in separate feeding bioassays in which preference for induced and noninduced leaves was compared separately, L3 instars of M. brassicae preferred noninduced German plants over Dutch plants but induced Dutch plants over German plants, revealing that changes in primary metabolites or an unidentified non-GS compound mediates population- related differences in plant quality. The results reveal asymmetric effects of plant quality in exotic plants on organisms in the second and third trophic level.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet 4 trophic levels
biological-control
bottom-up
chemistry
cotesia-congregata
evolution
host
insect herbivores
plant allelochemicals
strategies
author Harvey, J.A.
Gols, R.
author_facet Harvey, J.A.
Gols, R.
author_sort Harvey, J.A.
title Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis
title_short Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis
title_full Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis
title_fullStr Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis
title_full_unstemmed Development of Mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid Microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed Bunias orientalis
title_sort development of mamestra brassicae and its solitary endoparasitoid microplitis mediator on two populations of the invasive weed bunias orientalis
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/development-of-mamestra-brassicae-and-its-solitary-endoparasitoid
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AT golsr developmentofmamestrabrassicaeanditssolitaryendoparasitoidmicroplitismediatorontwopopulationsoftheinvasiveweedbuniasorientalis
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