“…They are also key players in the 107 interaction between leaf-miners and their host-plant with an intri-108 cate involvement of insect bacterial symbionts sometimes impli-109 cated (Connor and Taverner, 1997;Kaiser et al, 2010;Body et al, 110 2013; Giron and Glevarec, 2014;Gutzwiller et al, 2015). 111 Leaf-mining and gall-inducing insects likely took advantage of 112 their intimate relationship with their host-plant to manipulate 113 their microenvironment, thus creating insect-generated shelters 114 that avoid plant defenses, buffer against seasonal variations of leaf 115 nutritional quality, and/or allow the insect to consume high nutri-116 tious plant tissues leading to a higher feeding efficiency (Price 117 et al, 1987;Hespeinde, 1991;Connor and Taverner, 1997;Stone 118 and upper parenchyma (Body et al, 2015), resulting in the forma- 136 tion of feeding windows on a characteristic tentiform-shaped mine 137 (Pottinger and LeRoux, 1971;Djemai et al, 2000). As in other 138 leaf-miner systems, P. blancardella creates 'green-islands' around 139 mining caterpillars on yellow (but also green) leaves that provide 140 sugar-rich green tissues as well as creating an enhanced nutritional 141 microenvironment in an otherwise senescent context (Giron et al, 142 2007;Body et al, 2013).…”