五倍子蜂在实验室条件下成功诱导野玫瑰形成虫瘿

IF 2 3区 农林科学 Q2 ENTOMOLOGY Ecological Entomology Pub Date : 2024-07-20 DOI:10.1111/een.13366
Zoltán László, Bálint Szilágyi, Borbála Macalik, Mátyás Biró, Constantin‐Teodor Iordache, Marco Nicula, Dorina Podar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

植物虫瘿是由包括昆虫在内的各种生物造成的一种独特的外植体,是诱导体幼虫的养料。尽管分类学家和生态学家试图阐明植物虫瘿形成背后的机制,但对其的了解仍不全面。现代遗传技术可以对分子过程进行深入分析,但不同物种之间的差异使分析陷入困境。建立对实验室友好的植物瘿诱导体群落至关重要,但以往的尝试都面临挑战。我们的研究部分旨在建立一个实验室群落,其中包括野玫瑰(蔷薇属)和作为引诱虫的蔷薇瘿蜂属 Diplolepis。为植物生长优化了可控的室内条件。移栽野玫瑰,然后将其暴露在虫瘿诱导体中,并对其进行监测。对成功初始化的虫瘿生长情况进行了测量和分析,揭示了植物活力对虫瘿大小的影响。我们的研究成功地建立了一个新的实验室社区,用于进一步研究虫瘿的形成机制。
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Successful gall induction on wild roses by gall wasps under lab conditions
Plant galls are unique outgrowths caused by various organisms, including insects, serving as nourishment for the inducer's larvae. Despite the taxonomists and ecologists attempts to elucidate the mechanisms behind plant gall formation, its understanding is still incomplete. Modern genetic techniques allow in‐depth analysis of the molecular processes, but variations across species entangle the analysis. Establishing laboratory‐friendly plant–gall inducer communities is crucial, yet past attempts have faced challenges. Our study partly aimed to create a laboratory community involving wild roses (Rosa sp.) and rose gall wasps belonging to the genus Diplolepis as gall‐inducing insects. Controlled indoor conditions were optimized for plant growth. Wild roses were transplanted, then exposed to gall inducers, and monitored. Successfully initialized gall growth was measured and analysed, revealing insights into the impact of plant vigour on gall size as a secondary aim. Our study successfully established a novel laboratory community for further research on gall formation mechanisms.
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来源期刊
Ecological Entomology
Ecological Entomology 生物-昆虫学
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
4.50%
发文量
94
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ecological Entomology publishes top-quality original research on the ecology of insects and related invertebrate taxa. Our aim is to publish papers that will be of considerable interest to the wide community of ecologists who are motivated by ecological or evolutionary theory. The suitability of a manuscript will usually be assessed within 5 days. We publish full-length Original Articles as well as Reviews, Short Communications, Methods and Natural History papers. In Original Articles, we greatly prefer papers that test specific hypotheses and which have a high degree of novelty. All categories aim for innovative contributions that advance the subject of ecological entomology.
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