Journal
BEHAVIOUR
Volume 157, Issue 12-13, Pages 1059-1089Publisher
BRILL
DOI: 10.1163/1568539X-bja10041
Keywords
oviposition; recognition; confusion; behaviour; volatiles; neurological
Categories
Funding
- Entomological Society of Queensland small grants scheme
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Generalist insect herbivores feed mainly on one or more primary host species. but unlike specialists they also accept numerous secondary hosts. This raises the question of how generalists retain a broad host range yet allocate most of their eggs to primary hosts. We considered three possible explanations. (1) Threshold: secondary hosts arc accepted less readily than primary hosts. (2) Feedback loop: insects ovipositing on primary hosts lay subsequent eggs faster than on secondary hosts. (3) Choice: insects compare plant cues sensed over a certain period and oviposit on preferred plants. We measured time and number of landings leading to egg-laying in a generalist moth, Helicoverpa punaigera, on a primary host and two secondary hosts and recorded subsequent egglaying rates on each. The moths typically accepted only the primary host on the first landing and laid subsequent eggs on this host earlier in the night, indicating thresholds and feedback operate together.
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