Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
Inicio  /  Agriculture  /  Vol: 13 Par: 9 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

What Is More Important to Host-Seeking Entomopathogenic Nematodes, Innate or Learned Preference?

Alexander Gaffke    
Maritza Romero and Hans Alborn    

Resumen

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 successfully infect a suitable insect host in a chemically complex soil environment. EPNs can have innate host insect preferences and can be attracted to semiochemicals associated with that host. They can also develop strong learned preferences for chemical signals associated with the presence of a host, such as herbivory-induced volatiles. We hypothesized that simultaneous manipulation of innate and learned preferences could result in increased biological control services of EPNs in agriculture. Separate cohorts of the EPN Steinernema diaprepesi were raised on two insect hosts, Galleria mellonella and Tenebrio molitor, for multiple generations until the nematodes in a dual-choice olfactometer exhibited preference for the host they were reared on. Subsequently, the two strains of nematodes were imprinted on three plant-produced terpenoids of agricultural significance: pregeijerene, ß-caryophyllene, and a-pinene. After exposure to one of the plant compounds, the behavior of the EPNs was assayed in an olfactometer where the two host insects were presented with and without the plant compounds. We found that plant volatile exposure increased the infection rate of the nematodes, and some host?compound combinations proved to be attractive, but other combinations appeared to become repellent. These results indicate that learned preference is neither subordinate nor superior to innate preference, and that infection efficiency can vary with compound exposure and insect host.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Algirdas Justinas Staugaitis and Bernardas Vaznonis    
Motivated by increased agricultural commodity price volatility and surges during the past decade, we investigated whether financial speculation is to blame. The aim of this paper is to build on prior research about to what extent and in which ways financ... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Florian Kitzler, Helmut Wagentristl, Reinhard W. Neugschwandtner, Andreas Gronauer and Viktoria Motsch    
Modern precision agriculture applications increasingly rely on stable computer vision outputs. An important computer vision task is to discriminate between soil and plant pixels, which is called plant segmentation. For this task, supervised learning tech... ver más
Revista: Agriculture

 
Eduardo Acuña,Antonio Pinto,Jorge Cancino,Simón Sandoval     Pág. 1217 - 1229
Upon seeing the forest valuation in a knowledge-based framework and, although there are studies that indicate how the Chilean forestry companies evaluate their forestry assets, existing information can be inferred only on large and medium-sized enterpris... ver más

 
E.B. Alionye,,Emmanuel Ahaotu,R. O. Ihenacho,A O Chukwu,    
The researcher has undertaken this study on comparative evaluation of swine production with other domestic livestock in Mbaitolu Local Government Council of Imo State, Nigeria to proffer some solution to the problems hindering the rearing of swine in the... ver más

 
Yuko Yamane, Jagath Kularatne and Kasumi Ito    
This study investigated what kind of diversities of cropping patterns observed in home gardens distributed on the eastern slopes of the Uluguru Mountains in central Tanzania, and how the diversity come into occurred. The major focus included the differen... ver más
Revista: Agriculture