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Alterations in the odor profile of plants in cultivar mixtures affect aphid host-location behavior. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how mixing different wheat cultivars impacts the odors they emit and influences aphid attraction.
  • The research found that certain cultivar combinations changed the volatile organic compounds released, making them less appealing to aphids compared to when they were grown alone.
  • These findings emphasize the importance of plant diversity in managing aphid populations through altered plant scent, supporting the idea that having the "right neighbor" can enhance pest control.

Article Abstract

The effect of cultivar mixtures on aphid control is attributed to the masking or alteration of host-preferred cultivar odor cues. However, the underlying physiological mechanism remains unclear. This study assessed alterations in the volatile emissions of wheat cultivars grown together (Florence-Aurora and Forment; Florence-Aurora and Montcada) and the consequences for the olfactory preference of aphids. Volatile organic compounds were collected from wheat plants grown in a laboratory under mixed or monoculture conditions and subsequently analyzed. The odor profiles of Florence-Aurora and Montcada were indistinguishable from each other. However, the odors of Florence-Aurora and Forment grown in monocultures differed significantly from those emitted by their mixture. The Florence-Aurora and Forment mixture induced plant physiological responses that affected the emission of single volatile compounds and, consequently, altered volatile organic compound ratios. English grain aphids () were less attracted to the odors of Florence-Aurora and Forment when grown as a mixture than the combination of the odors from Florence-Aurora and Forment monocultures. Moreover, aphids preferred clean air over the odor from the Florence-Aurora and Forment mixture but preferred the odor from the Florence-Aurora and Montcada mixture over clean air. This study highlights the beneficial effects of intraspecific plant diversity on aphid control by altering plant odors in response to plant-plant interactions. The emission of less attractive odor cues consequently affects plant-aphid interactions; hence, less attractive odors are likely to impair aphid host-locating behavior. This effect was exclusive to certain cultivar mixtures, which supports the "right neighbor" concept.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10284062PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1186425DOI Listing

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