1. Recent studies have shown that plant-plant interaction via chemicals (allelopathy) can affect insects. Here the effects on aphid acceptance of barley after exposure to volatiles and root exudates from two common weeds, the thistles Cirsium arvense and Cirsium vulgare, were investigated.2. Settling by bird cherry-oat aphid, Rhopalosiphum padi, was significantly reduced on barley plants that had been exposed to volatiles from Cirsium species for 5 days. Settling by Sitobion avenae was also reduced on Cirsium-exposed plants, whereas settling by Metopolophium dirhodum was not.3. In olfactometer tests, Cirsium-exposed barley was significantly less attractive to R. padi than was unexposed barley, indicating that exposure causes a change in the volatile profile of barley.4. Exposure of barley to root exudates from Cirsium species had no effect on R. padi settling.5. The results lend weight to the theory that the effects of plant-plant allelopathy can extend to higher trophic levels.
1 Field experiments were performed in barley using volatile semiochemicals affecting population density (density-related substances ± DRS) and spring migration (methyl salicylate) in bird cherry oat aphid Rhopalosiphum padi (L.). Natural infestations of aphids were used, and semiochemical dosages were chosen to be biologically relevant based on previous studies. A simple formulation method for active substances using wax pellets was developed. 2 The effect of treatments on aphid populations was analysed in terms of initial colonization of the crop, temporal dynamics of the population and maximum aphid incidence. 3 Treatments caused a significant delay in aphid establishment in the crop, and reduced the average infestation by 25±50% compared with the untreated control. At a moderate attack rate, the treatments with methyl salicylate and DRS gave a significant reduction in maximum aphid numbers. 4 The significant control effect of the treatment encourages further investigation both to increase understanding of the ecological role of the active substances, and to establish the limitations for their use in plant protection.
The effects of within-species plant genotype mixing on the habitat preference of a polyphagous ladybird were studied. Plant species diversity is often claimed to positively affect habitat preferences of insect predators, but the effects of within-species genotype diversity have not been extensively studied. In a field experiment with different barley (Hordeum vulgare) genotypes in mixed and pure stands, adult seven-spot ladybird Coccinella septempunctata, a polyphagous predator, preferred a specific combination of genotypes over the single genotypes alone before aphids had arrived in the crop, and again when aphids were emigrating. In laboratory experiments on adult ladybird orientation to odour from barley, ladybirds were attracted/arrested by the mixed odour of the same barley genotype mixture that was preferred in the field. Exposure of one barley genotype to volatiles from the other also caused the odour of the exposed plants to become more attractive to ladybirds. The results support the hypothesis that plant volatiles may attract or arrest foraging adult ladybirds, contributing to the selection of favourable habitats, and they show that within-species plant genotype mixing can shape interactions within multitrophic communities.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.