Are eavesdroppers multimodal? Sensory exploitation of floral signals by a non-native cockroach Blatta orientalis

Author:

Vergara Rodrigo C.1,Torres-Araneda Alejandra1,Villagra Diego A.23,Raguso Robert A.3,Arroyo Mary T. K.1,Villagra Cristian A.14

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Ecología y Biodiversidad, IEB, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile

2. Centro de Recursos Naturales y Medio Ambiente, Departamento de Química, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Tarapacá, Arica, Chile

3. Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

4. Instituto de Entomología, Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la Educación, Casilla 147, Santiago,Chile

Abstract

Abstract The study of multi-modal communication has only recently been extended to innate and learned interactions between flowers and their animal visitors, and usually only to pollinators. Here we studied the relevance of floral scent and visual display of a night blooming, putatively hawkmoth-pollinated plant Oenothera acaulis (Onagraceae) in the attraction of non-native cockroaches Blatta orientalis (Blattodea: Blattidae), which function as facultative floral larcenists in coastal habitats of central Chile. We experimentally decoupled visual (corolla) and olfactory (fragrance) stimuli by presenting paper corollas and green mesh bags, with or without a freshly-picked natural flower inside. We then contrasted the behavioral responses of roaches in these treatments with those to the natural combination of traits in actual flowers and their respective control treatments, measuring the roaches’ frequency of first visits, mean and total residence time spent in each treatment. The roaches primarily used olfactory cues when approaching O. acaulis flowers at two biologically relevant spatial scales. In addition, the presence of conspecific roaches had a strong influence on recruitment to the experimental arena, increasing the statistical differences among treatments. Our results suggest a primacy of floral fragrance over visual stimuli in the foraging responses of B. orientalis. Olfactory cues were necessary and sufficient to attract the roaches, and the visual cues presented in our manipulations only marginally increased their attraction within a 20 cm diameter of the stimulus. The full spectrum of floral visitation behavior was not elicited by the artificial flowers, suggesting the need for additional tactile or contact chemosensory stimuli not provided by paper. Although the nitrogenous scent compounds that we found in O. acaulis flowers are almost exclusively found in hawkmoth-pollinated flowers, the attractiveness of these compounds to a non-native, facultative flower-visiting insect indicates that they do not function as pollinator-specific signals for hawkmoth attraction.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

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