Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Plant-associated CO2 mediates long-distance host location and foraging behaviour of a root herbivore

ELIFE(2021)

Cited 10|Views16
No score
Abstract
Insect herbivores use different cues to locate host plants. The importance of CO2 in this context is not well understood. We manipulated CO2 perception in western corn rootworm (WCR) larvae through RNAi and studied how CO2 perception impacts their interaction with their host plant. The expression of a carbon dioxide receptor, DvvGr2, is specifically required for dose-dependent larval responses to CO2. Silencing CO2 perception or scrubbing plant-associated CO2 has no effect on the ability of WCR larvae to locate host plants at short distances (<9 cm), but impairs host location at greater distances. WCR larvae preferentially orient and prefer plants that grow in well-fertilized soils compared to plants that grow in nutrient-poor soils, a behaviour that has direct consequences for larval growth and depends on the ability of the larvae to perceive rootemitted CO2. This study unravels how CO2 can mediate plant-herbivore interactions by serving as a distance-dependent host location cue.
More
Translated text
Key words
behaviour,ecology,foraging,host location,maize,plant-herbivore interactions,volatile perception
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined