Host specialization chemical ecology of a plant insect herbivore system

dc.contributor.guidePandit, Sagar
dc.coverage.spatialNA
dc.creator.researcherBinayak, Gauri
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-09T08:12:45Z
dc.date.available2025-05-09T08:12:45Z
dc.date.awarded2024
dc.date.completed2024
dc.date.registered2016
dc.description.abstractHostplant location and conspecific aggregation on the hostplant are the key behaviors of several herbivore insect species. The cues used by insects for host identification and aggregation initiation have been researched mainly using a single hostplant and herbivore species. It has been found that the chemical repertoire of plants, including volatile and non-volatile secondary metabolites, is critical in mediating these processes. In natural ecosystems, often several closely related plant species co-occur. Despite these related plant species similar chemical repertoires, insects proficiently locate their hosts. How they resolve such complex chemical cues is understudied. To study the basis of such resolution, we used five co-occurring Ipomoea spp. as hostplants and four Chiridopsis spp. (beetles) as their herbivores. In this wild sympatric system from the Western Ghats of India, monophagous, biphagous, and oligophagous Chiridopsis spp. are specialist herbivores of different Ipomoea species. We studied the chemistry of these beetles stringent host-specificity by determining the roles of different chemical cues in hostplant location and aggregation. We analyzed beetles hostplant preferences vis-à-vis hostplant volatile blends. We found plant volatiles as the primary hostplant identification cues. Using GC-MS/-FID and SPME headspace analyses we characterized odor blends of the five Ipomoea spp. and identified putative attractants and repellents for each Chiridopsis sp. using multivariate statistics. We determined their attractant or deterrent natures using behavioral assays and ascertained their perception by the antennal olfactory receptors using electroantennography. Beetles responded to these compounds only when they were delivered via their hostplant odor blends. The same compound delivered via differentially preferred hostplants odor blends generated differential responses. Beetles did not respond when these compounds were provided individually or via non-host odor blends.
dc.description.noteNA
dc.format.accompanyingmaterialNone
dc.format.dimensionsNA
dc.format.extentNA
dc.identifier.researcherid
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10603/637215
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisher.institutionDepartment of Biology
dc.publisher.placePune
dc.publisher.universityIndian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Pune
dc.relationNA
dc.rightsself
dc.source.universityUniversity
dc.subject.keywordBiology
dc.subject.keywordBiology and Biochemistry
dc.subject.keywordLife Sciences
dc.titleHost specialization chemical ecology of a plant insect herbivore system
dc.title.alternativeNil
dc.type.degreePh.D.

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