Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow

Most innate responses to color stimuli lead herbivorous insects to orient to green and yellow surfaces. Early research showed that aphid orientation to plants is influenced by foliar pigments and leads them to alight on leaves of a specific physiological state regardless of whether or not it is thei...

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Main Authors: Kevin eFarnier, Adrian G Dyer, Martin James Steinbauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fevo.2014.00067/full
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author Kevin eFarnier
Adrian G Dyer
Martin James Steinbauer
author_facet Kevin eFarnier
Adrian G Dyer
Martin James Steinbauer
author_sort Kevin eFarnier
collection DOAJ
description Most innate responses to color stimuli lead herbivorous insects to orient to green and yellow surfaces. Early research showed that aphid orientation to plants is influenced by foliar pigments and leads them to alight on leaves of a specific physiological state regardless of whether or not it is their actual host. In this study, we quantified the color preferences of four psyllids specialized on young to recently expanded leaves of different Eucalyptus hosts presenting distinct between (inter-specific) and within canopy (ontogenic) optical characteristics. Color preferences of Ctenarytaina eucalypti and C. bipartita were similar to those observed in aphids with more frequent selection of yellow and green stimuli, consistent with the coloration of their host leaves. However, attraction of Anoeconeossa bundoorensis and Glycaspis brimblecombei to a red stimulus contrasts strongly with the literature for hemipteran and herbivorous insects generally for which attraction to red is peculiar. Interestingly, both red-attracted species occur on the same host eucalypt, which expresses anthocyanic (red) young leaves. Our experiments demonstrate that these two species are sensitive to long wavelength radiation. Behavioral work and modeling of putative aphid-like photoreceptors were conducted to investigate whether achromatic vision mediates perception of red. Our results do not provide strong evidence for an intensity-dependant type of attraction. Nevertheless, the current knowledge of photoreceptors in Hemiptera identifies the achromatic as the most likely mechanism for detecting long wavelengths. Thus, our findings highlight the need for physiological work with Psylloidea to dissect the mechanisms responsible for such atypical responses. We discuss the ecological implications of our work in relation to red foliar pigments in expanding leaves of perennial plants which differs greatly from the thoroughly studied aphid-autumnal leaves system involving senescing foliage.
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spelling doaj.art-93422c81db984bd29dda87281667ccf22022-12-22T00:10:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2014-10-01210.3389/fevo.2014.00067108464Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellowKevin eFarnier0Adrian G Dyer1Martin James Steinbauer2La Trobe UniversityRMIT UniversityLa Trobe UniversityMost innate responses to color stimuli lead herbivorous insects to orient to green and yellow surfaces. Early research showed that aphid orientation to plants is influenced by foliar pigments and leads them to alight on leaves of a specific physiological state regardless of whether or not it is their actual host. In this study, we quantified the color preferences of four psyllids specialized on young to recently expanded leaves of different Eucalyptus hosts presenting distinct between (inter-specific) and within canopy (ontogenic) optical characteristics. Color preferences of Ctenarytaina eucalypti and C. bipartita were similar to those observed in aphids with more frequent selection of yellow and green stimuli, consistent with the coloration of their host leaves. However, attraction of Anoeconeossa bundoorensis and Glycaspis brimblecombei to a red stimulus contrasts strongly with the literature for hemipteran and herbivorous insects generally for which attraction to red is peculiar. Interestingly, both red-attracted species occur on the same host eucalypt, which expresses anthocyanic (red) young leaves. Our experiments demonstrate that these two species are sensitive to long wavelength radiation. Behavioral work and modeling of putative aphid-like photoreceptors were conducted to investigate whether achromatic vision mediates perception of red. Our results do not provide strong evidence for an intensity-dependant type of attraction. Nevertheless, the current knowledge of photoreceptors in Hemiptera identifies the achromatic as the most likely mechanism for detecting long wavelengths. Thus, our findings highlight the need for physiological work with Psylloidea to dissect the mechanisms responsible for such atypical responses. We discuss the ecological implications of our work in relation to red foliar pigments in expanding leaves of perennial plants which differs greatly from the thoroughly studied aphid-autumnal leaves system involving senescing foliage.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fevo.2014.00067/fullAnthocyaninsColor VisionEucalyptusHemipteraHost Specificityplant pigments
spellingShingle Kevin eFarnier
Adrian G Dyer
Martin James Steinbauer
Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Anthocyanins
Color Vision
Eucalyptus
Hemiptera
Host Specificity
plant pigments
title Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow
title_full Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow
title_fullStr Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow
title_full_unstemmed Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow
title_short Related but not alike: not all Hemiptera are attracted to yellow
title_sort related but not alike not all hemiptera are attracted to yellow
topic Anthocyanins
Color Vision
Eucalyptus
Hemiptera
Host Specificity
plant pigments
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fevo.2014.00067/full
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