Aphidius colemani Behavior Changes Depending on Volatile Organic Compounds Emitted by Plants Infected with Viruses with Different Modes of Transmission

Author:

Clemente-Orta Gemma12ORCID,Cabello Ángel1,Garzo Elisa1,Moreno Aranzazu1,Fereres Alberto1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Ciencias Agrarias, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (ICA-CSIC), C/Serrano 115 dpdo, 28006 Madrid, Spain

2. Departament de Producció Vegetal i Ciència Forestal, AGROTECNIO Center, Universitat de Lleida, Rovira Roure 191, 25198 Lleida, Spain

Abstract

Natural enemies are an additional component that may interact directly with the plant–virus–vector association, affecting viral dispersion. In our study, we conducted olfactometry assays to explore how single and mixed infections with CMV or/and CABYV modify the attractiveness of A. colemani to aphid-free and aphid-infested melon plants using two melon genotypes. Subsequently, we investigated the influence of CABYV-infected plants infested by A. gossypii on the parasitism rate and emergence of A. colemani in a dual-choice assay under greenhouse conditions. Our study demonstrates that males showed no preference for either infected or non-infected plants. Female parasitoids exhibit a preference for volatiles emitted by CMV and mixed-infected melon plants over clean air but not over mock-inoculated plants, suggesting a response influenced by plant genotype. Female parasitoid responses to CABYV and its interactions with aphids revealed a preference for mock-inoculated plants over CABYV-infected plants and a parasitism rate slightly higher (7.12%) on non-infected plants. Our study revealed that (1) parasitoids may reject olfactory cues from CABYV-infected plants, potentially interfering with the plant’s “cry for help” response; (2) in the case of CMV, whether in single or mixed infections, non-infected plants are as attractive as infected ones to parasitoids. Our findings suggest that persistent viruses manipulate aphid parasitoid behavior to their advantage, promoting virus disease in melon crops.

Funder

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation “Multitrophic Interactions Between Plants, Viruses, Aphids and Natural Enemies in a Changing Climate (INTERVIRAPHID)”

EU—NextGenerationEU

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Insect Science

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