Authors
Beatriz Dader, Dylan Gwynn-Jones, Aránzazu Moreno, Ana Winters, Alberto Fereres
Publication date
2014/9/5
Journal
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology
Volume
138
Pages
307-316
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation directly regulates a multitude of herbivore life processes, in addition to indirectly affecting insect success via changes in plant chemistry and morphogenesis. Here we looked at plant and insect (aphid and whitefly) exposure to supplemental UV-A radiation in the glasshouse environment and investigated effects on insect population growth. Glasshouse grown peppers and eggplants were grown from seed inside cages covered by novel plastic filters, one transparent and the other opaque to UV-A radiation. At a 10-true leaf stage for peppers (53 days) and 4-true leaf stage for eggplants (34 days), plants were harvested for chemical analysis and infested by aphids and whiteflies, respectively. Clip-cages were used to introduce and monitor the insect fitness and populations of the pests studied. Insect pre-reproductive period, fecundity, fertility and intrinsic rate of natural increase were assessed …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Dader, D Gwynn-Jones, A Moreno, A Winters… - Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology, 2014