DAILY PATTERNS OF REPRODUCTIVE ACTIVITY AND THE INFLUENCE OF ADULT DENSITY AND EXPOSURE TO HOST PLANTS ON REPRODUCTION IN THE DIAMONDBACK MOTH (LEPIDOPTERA, PLUTELLIDAE)

被引:49
作者
PIVNICK, KA
JARVIS, BJ
GILLOTT, C
SLATER, GP
UNDERHILL, EW
机构
[1] NATL RES COUNCIL CANADA,INST PLANT BIOTECHNOL,SASKATOON S7N 0W9,SASKATCHEWAN,CANADA
[2] UNIV SASKATCHEWAN,DEPT BIOL,SASKATOON S7N 0W0,SASKATCHEWAN,CANADA
关键词
Insect-plant interaction; Insecta; Plutella xylostella; Reproductive maturation;
D O I
10.1093/ee/19.3.587
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
Daily patterns of activity and the effects of adult density and exposure to host plants on the onset of reproductive activities and age-specific fecundity of the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.), were determined under constant conditions of 21°C, 70%RH, and a 16:8 (L:D) photoperiod. More than 50% of adult emergence occurred in the first 8 h of the photophase. Although calling occurred throughout the scotophase, >70% of mating and oviposition took place in the first 4 h. Approximately 90% of females had begun to call, mate, and lay eggs, and the females contained ≥1 mature egg by night 4 when kept with males and host plants in individual pairs. In contrast, only 27% of females kept with males but without host plants had mated by night 4, and only 64% contained mature eggs. Individually caged females laid eggs at a rate >50% of their maximum daily oviposition on nights 3-5, and for females caged in groups of 50 males and 50 females this occurred on nights 4-10. Ovarian development also was consistently slower in the group-caged females than in the individually caged females, the former containing 16 to 93% as many mature eggs as the individually caged females, depending on age and prior exposure to plants. Male sexual maturation was not complete at adult emergence, and only 54% of day-l males were able to fertilize 4-d-old, virgin females. By night 4,98% of males were able to do so regardless of whether or not they were exposed to host plants. Females mated to day-4 males that were exposed to plants for the first three nights produced significantly more viable eggs compared with females mated to day-4 males that were not previously exposed to host plants. © 1990 Entomological Society of America.
引用
收藏
页码:587 / 593
页数:7
相关论文
共 17 条
[2]  
ASHIHARA W, 1977, JPN J APPL ENTOMOL Z, V21, P171, DOI 10.1303/jjaez.21.171
[3]  
BEIRNE BP, 1971, MEM ENTOMOL SOC CAN, V78, P38
[4]  
DANKS HV, 1987, BIOL SURVEY CANADA M, V1
[5]   MIGRATION STRATEGIES OF INSECTS [J].
DINGLE, H .
SCIENCE, 1972, 175 (4028) :1327-+
[6]  
HARCOURT D. G., 1957, CANADIAN ENT, V89, P554
[7]   ROLE OF HOST-PLANT STIMULI IN SEXUAL-BEHAVIOR OF SMALL ERMINE MOTHS (YPONOMEUTA) [J].
HENDRIKSE, A ;
VOSBUNNEMEYER, E .
ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1987, 12 (04) :363-371
[8]  
HERREBOUT W M, 1982, Mededelingen van de Faculteit Landbouwwetenschappen Universiteit Gent, V47, P503
[9]   INFLUENCE OF HOST PLANT OR MALES ON OVARIAN DEVELOPMENT OR OVIPOSITION IN DIAMONDBACK MOTH PLUTELLA MACULIPENNIS (CURT) [J].
HILLYER, RJ ;
THORSTEINSON, AJ .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY - BACK YEAR PROJECT, 1969, 47 (05) :805-+
[10]  
HILLYER RJ, 1965, THESIS LONDON U LOND