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  • 1
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Cabbage root fly ; Delia radicum ; Brassica oleracea ; oviposition behaviour ; glucosinolates ; glucobrassicin ; sensory physiology ; tarsal contact — chemoreceptors ; gustation ; structure — activity relationship
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The role of glucosinolates in the oviposition behaviour of the cabbage root fly,Delia radicum (L.) (Diptera, Anthomyiidae) was investigated using egg counts and electrophysiological recordings from tarsal contact chemoreceptors. The glucosinolates present both inside and on the surface of cauliflower leaves were determined. The total amounts obtained with the two methods differed by a factor of 100. The extract of the leaf surface contained about 60 μg per g leaf extracted (gle), the total leaf extract 7.5 mg per gle. The glucosinolate patterns of the two extracts were qualitatively similar, but the ratios of the content of individual glucosinolates showed considerable differences. The D sensilla on segment 3 and 4 of the tarsus ofD. radicum females were shown to contain a sensitive receptor cell for glucosinolates. In contrast, the receptor cells of the D sensilla of the other segments did not respond in a dose dependent way to these compounds. The glucosinolate receptors were found to be especially sensitive to glucobrassicin, gluconasturtiin and glucobrassicanapin with thresholds of about 10−8 M to 10−9 M. Large differences (up to two orders of magnitude) were observed among the different glucosinolates. A significant correlation was found between the behavioural discrimination index and the electrophysiological results. But no obvious correlation existed between the chemical nature of the glucosinolate side chain (e.g. indole, aromatic and aliphatic groups), and their stimulatory activity. However, a significant correlation was found between the overall length of the side chain and the biological activity. Although the flies discriminated clearly between model leaves with and without glucosinolates, a clear dose response curve was only obtained for the indole glucosinolate glucobrassicin. Since the most stimulatory fraction of the surface extract contained no glucosinolates, it was concluded that other compounds, in addition to glucosinolates, do play an important role for the stimulation of oviposition.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: antixenosis ; host-plant resistance ; host preference ; oviposition behaviour ; contact chemoreception ; glucosinolates ; Delia radicum ; Delia floralis ; Anthomyiidae ; Diptera ; Brassica ; Cruciferae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In Brassica crops differences in susceptibility to root fly attack can be largely attributed to antixenotic resistance. Plants of four genotypes (two swedes and two kales) with widely differing resistance in field trials, were compared in laboratory choice assays for their susceptibility to oviposition by the root flies Delia radicum (L.) and D. floralis (Fallen) (Diptera, Anthomyiidae). For both species the preference among the genotypes corresponded to the susceptibility of the genotypes in the field. The preference ranking in response to surrogate leaves treated with methanolic surface extracts of the four genotypes was identical to the preference among potted plants, demonstrating that chemical factors on the leaf surface mediate host preference for oviposition in these species. For both species of fly, glucosinolates are major oviposition stimulants and for D. radicum an additional, nonglucosinolate oviposition stimulant, presently called CIF, is known. We describe a procedure for chromatographic separation of glucosinolates from CIF in leaf surface extracts. In oviposition-choice assays with D. radicum, the CIF-fractions of the two swede genotypes applied to surrogate leaves received a 1.8 and 4.6 times higher proportion of eggs than the respective glucosinolate-fractions, confirming the major importance of CIF as an oviposition stimulant. The genotype of swede that was preferred by both fly species in tests with plants and methanolic leaf surface extracts, also stimulated oviposition more in tests with the glucosinolate-fractions or the CIF-fractions derived from the surface extracts, respectively. Thus, glucosinolates and CIF together account for the observed preference among the genotypes and may also be responsible for their susceptibility under field conditions. In the two kale genotypes the preference for plants or surface extracts differed from the preference among the corresponding glucosinolate- and CIF-fractions, indicating that additional, as yet unknown chemical factors may also be involved. For both groups of stimulants tarsal chemoreceptors allow electrophysiological monitoring of glucosinolate- and CIF-activity in fractionated surface extracts. For D. radicum the chemosensory activity of both glucosinolate- and CIF-fractions corresponded to the respective behavioural activity in the oviposition preference tests, suggesting that preference for oviposition among genotypes can be predicted from the electrophysiological activity of their fractions. The chemosensory response of D. floralis, in particular to the CIF-fractions, was less pronounced than the response of D. radicum, indicating interspecific differences in the perception of the major oviposition stimulants. We discuss the potential application of electrophysiological techniques in support of other screening methods used in breeding for root fly resistance in Brassica crops.
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