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Using hybrid and backcross larvae of Papilio canadensis and Papilio glaucus to detect induced phytochemical resistance in hybrid poplar trees experimentally defoliated by gypsy moths

  • J. Mark Scriber
  • , Kirsten Weir
  • , Dylan Parry
  • , Jessica Deering

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Sub-plots of hybrid poplars were experimentally defoliated using 10 million gypsy moth larvae. Half of the defoliated (and undefoliated control) plots were fertilized to see if this would ameliorate the predicted induction of carbon-based phenolic defenses in the regrowth leaves. In order to bioassay the leaves of the four different treatments, we employed a continuum of genotypes (different hybrids and backcrosses of two different species of tiger swallowtail butterflies) with different abilities to detoxify these allelochemicals. Based on our previous studies with phytochemicals from the Salicaceae plant family, Papilio canadensis was likely to consume and process all Populus spp treatments, whereas P. glaucus predicted to either not consume or else quickly die on all Populus treatment leaves. Hybrid and backcross larvae of these two butterfly species are known to have intermediate levels of esterase detoxication enzymes and would therefore be likely to provide a continuum or at least varying degrees of sensitivity in bioassays for even the most subtle induction responses in the regrowth leaves. This presumption was supported in the feeding and growth studies conducted at different times post-defoliation during the 1997 growing season in Michigan.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)233-236
Number of pages4
JournalEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata
Volume91
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1999

Keywords

  • Differential growth rates
  • Herbivore defoliation
  • Hybrid genotypes
  • Indirect competition
  • Lymantria dispar
  • Papilionidae
  • Phenolic glycoside detoxification
  • Phytochemical induction
  • Tiger swallowtail butterflies

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