Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The use of actometry and electronic nose devices to assess the locomotor activity of two species of Coccinellidae (Coleoptera)

Guillermo Heit    
Valeria Messina    
Graciela Mareggiani    
Rosa Cohen    
Paola Carrizo    

Resumen

The effect of odor signals on the locomotor activity of Cycloneda sanguinea and Harmonia axyridis was evaluated using two different actometric devices. The purpose of the analysis was to differentiate between the responses elicited by direct contact with the substrates and the responses that occurred if the coccinellids were exposed only to volatiles and had no direct substrate contact. The odor profile of the environmental volatiles (semiochemicals) in the bioassays was analyzed using an electronic nose (Modular Sensor System Moses II). The treatments used included volatiles emitted by pepper leaves (healthy or infested with Myzus persicae), M. persicae molts and honeydew, and healthy leaves treated with an artificial inducer of the systemic acquired response to herbivory (AISAR). The results suggest that a specific stimulus linked to aphid-host interaction would trigger a distinctive locomotor activity pattern in H. axyridis, with or without any contact with the aphids or the host plant. In contrast, C. sanguinea was not able to differentiate between volatiles from infested or uninfected pepper leaves or to distinguish these volatiles from clean filter paper (control). If C. sanguinea was in contact with aphid-infested pepper leaves (regardless of the previous prey density), it moved slowly and scanned the area exhaustively; H. axyridis showed significantly reduced locomotor activity when it was in contact with aphid-infested pepper leaves or aphid molts and honeydew, all reliable signals of the presence of a food source. In both species, treatment with Actigard (AISAR: Acibenzolar-S-methyl) failed to evoke the behavioral response observed in the treatment with aphid-infested pepper plants. The study also demonstrated that the E-nose can differentiate among blends of volatiles released from cut healthy or aphid-infested pepper leaves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Alexander Gaffke, Maritza Romero and Hans Alborn    
Entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs), small soil-dwelling non-segmented roundworms, are obligate parasites of insects and commonly used in agriculture for biological control of insect pests. For successful reproduction, EPNs must identify, move towards, and... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Liu Liu, Guisheng Qiu, Huaijiang Zhang, Qiang Yue, Wentao Yan and Lina Sun    
The peach fruit moth, Carposina sasakii, is part of the Carposinidae, and is harmful to the families Rosaceae and Rhamnaceae. C. sasakii lays eggs on the hairy surface of the fruit?s stalk cavity and calyx end. After hatching, the moth can bore into the ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
A.G.W.U. Perera,M.M.S.C. Karunaratne,S.D.M. Chinthaka    
Neem (Azadirachta indica A. juss), is known to possess a wide range of pharmacological properties and is thus commercially exploitable. Apart from its medicinal potential, a considerable progress has been achieved regarding biological potential and chemi... ver más

 
Osvaldo Reyes, Manuel Murillo, Esperanza Herrera, Francisco O. Carrete     Pág. 203 - 212
The objective of this study was to determine and compare seasonally the chemical composition, in vitro gas production, in situ degradability and ruminal fermentation of the diet selected by cattle grazing on native rangeland over two years. Diet samples ... ver más

 
José A. Miguel, José L. Calvo, Jesús Ciria, Begoña Asenjo     Pág. 65 - 73
To rear lambs of the Ojalada breed, fed exclusively on mothers? milk until 5 weeks, three feeding systems were compared: a) ewes kept indoors and fed chopped straw plus concentrate (IND+CH+C), total mixed ration (TMR); b) ewes kept indoors and fed whole ... ver más