Authors
Ivo Beyaert, Diana Köpke, Josefin Stiller, Almuth Hammerbacher, Kinuyo Yoneya, Axel Schmidt, Jonathan Gershenzon, Monika Hilker
Publication date
2012/1/7
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
279
Issue
1726
Pages
101-108
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Plant anti-herbivore defence is inducible by both insect feeding and egg deposition. However, little is known about the ability of insect eggs to induce defences directed not against the eggs themselves, but against larvae that subsequently hatch from the eggs. We studied how oviposition (OP) by the sawfly Diprion pini on Pinus sylvestris foliage affects the plant's defensive potential against sawfly larvae. Larvae that initiated their development on P. sylvestris twigs on which they hatched from eggs gained less weight and suffered higher mortality than those fed on egg-free twigs. The poor performance of these larvae also affected the next herbivore generation since fecundity of resulting females was lower than that of females which spent their larval development on egg-free pine. Transcript levels of P. sylvestris sesquiterpene synthases (PsTPS1, PsTPS2) were increased by D. pini OP, reached their highest levels …
Total citations
201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202437387664124665
Scholar articles
I Beyaert, D Köpke, J Stiller, A Hammerbacher… - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological …, 2012