Search results for " TRISSOLCUS BASALIS"

showing 10 items of 22 documents

Gli stimoli chimici indiretti dell'ospite nel processo di localizzazione da parte degli oofagi: conviene sintonizzarsi?

2008

Tra gli stimoli indiretti che un parassitoide può utilizzare per ritrovare l'ospite, particolare importanze rivestono per i parassitoidi oofagi le tracce chimiche depositate dai Pentatomidi mentre si muovono su un substrato. Questo segnale chimico induce nelle femmine del parassitoide un comportamento di arresto che ne delimita la ricerca e ne aumenta le possibilità di ritrovamento delle uova. Nel sistema Murgantia histrionica (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) - Trissolcus brochymenae (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) si è voluto verificare se lo stato fisiologico dell’ospite influenza lo sfruttamento delle tracce da parte del parassitoide. I biosaggi sono stati condotti in arena aperta, e registrati me…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataTrissolcus brochymenae Murgantia histrionica Trissolcus basalis risposta di arresto indirect host-related cues
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Foraging behaviour of a scelionid egg parasitoid exploiting chemical footprints from associated and non-associated host

2017

Chemical footprints deposited by herbivorous pentatomid host bugs hosts when walking on the plant are adsorbed by leaf surfaces and perceived as substrate borne semiochemicals by scelionid egg parasitoids during host selection process. They act as indirect host-related cues, as they are not able to “promise” to parasitoid females the presence of the suitable host stage, but they drive them in the areas where their hosts are potentially present. Once in contact with host chemical footprints, scelionid wasps evidence an innate arrestment response characterized by an intense searching behaviour on host-contaminated areas. Exploiting of these cues allows the parasitoids to optimize their search…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataHost location Halyomorpha halys Insect invasion Trissolcus basalis
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Semiochemical exploitation by two egg parasitoids,Trissolcus basalis and Trissolcus brochymenae (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae)

Chemo-orientation in egg parasitoids, a self-controlled movement in time and space, is led by volatile or substrate-borne chemicals distribution in the environment for purposes of locating host, food, mates and other resources. The perception of these chemical stimuli can be either from a distance by exploiting long-range infochemicals in the case of volatile chemoreception and/or upon contact with the cues when wasps are relatively close to the host in the case of contact chemo-reception by perceiving short-range infochemicals. In the present thesis, two different examples of chemo-orientation were treated. The first is an olfactory chemo-reception concerning Trissolcus basalis (Wollaston)…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataVolatile cues substrate-borne cues contact olfaction sensilla Trissolcus basalis Trissolcus brochymenae.
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Plant surface mediates interaction between true bug chemical footprints and scelionid egg parasitoids

2009

Chemical footprints left behind by true bugs act as contact kairomones inducing an arrestment response in scelionid egg parasitoids. Once in contact with contaminated substrates, female wasps display a characteristic arrestment posture followed by an increase of the host searching time. Previous studies were conducted on artificial substrates as filter papers, so that little is known about the effects of natural substrates on behavioural response by wasps. In field, the substrate where these interactions occur, i.e. the surface of plants, is covered by wax layers that can have a role in trophic interactions between insects. In this study, we investigated the influence of plant surfaces on a…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataNezara viridula Trissolcus basalis kairomone host location
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Mating Status of an Herbivorous Stink Bug Female Affects the Emission of Oviposition-Induced Plant Volatiles Exploited by an Egg Parasitoid

2019

Insect parasitoids are under selection pressure to optimize their host location strategy in order to maximize fitness. In parasitoid species that develop on host eggs, one of these strategies consists in the exploitation of oviposition-induced plant volatiles (OIPVs), specific blends of volatile organic compounds released by plants in response to egg deposition by herbivorous insects. Plants can recognize insect oviposition via elicitors that trigger OIPVs, but very few elicitors have been characterized so far. In particular, the source and the nature of the elicitor responsible of egg parasitoid recruitment in the case of plants induced with oviposition by stink bugs are still unknown. In …

0106 biological sciencesTrissolcus basalis;Nezara viridula;Vicia faba;indirect plant defenses;OIPVs;elicitorOIPVscomposé volatilPhysiologyBiodiversité et Ecologiemedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyInsect010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslcsh:PhysiologyParasitoidBiodiversity and EcologyPhysiology (medical)MatingTrissolcus basalisparasitoidOriginal Researchmedia_commonTrissolcus basalis Nezara viridula host location behaviour indirect plant defences egg parasitoid recruitmentelicitorlcsh:QP1-981biologyparasitoïdeHost (biology)fungiNezara viridulafood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationAttractioninsecte herbivoreElicitorVicia fabaElicitor; Indirect plant defenses; Nezara viridula; OIPVs; Trissolcus basalis; Vicia faba010602 entomologySettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataOlfactometerNezara viridulaoeuf d'insecte[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologyindirect plant defenses
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How can two competing egg parasitoid species coexist in a host patch?

2013

Interspecific competitions among parasitoids can affect community structures, and, as a consequence at applicative level, biological control programs. For example, competitions can cause local displacement of inferior species or niche separation. However, the coexistence of species attacking the same host is possible when they adopt different strategies to exploit the resource. In this work we evaluated in field and semi-field conditions intraguild interactions between two egg parasitoids, Trissolcus basalis and Ooencyrtus telenomicida exploring egg masses of Nezara viridula. In semi-field trials, pepper plants were covered with mesh net creating small cages with five plants inside. In each…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataInterspecific competition Trissolcus basalis Ooencyrtus telenomicida
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Insect oviposition induces volatile emission in herbaceous plants that attracts egg parasitoid

2003

SUMMARYThe egg parasitoid Trissolcus basalis (Wollaston) (Hymenoptera:Scelionidae) responded to synomones emitted by leguminous plants induced by feeding and oviposition activity of the bug Nezara viridula (L.)(Heteroptera: Pentatomidae). This was shown by laboratory bioassays using a Y-tube olfactometer. Broad bean leaves (Vicia faba L.) damaged by feeding activity of N. viridula and on which host egg mass had been laid produced synomones that attracted T. basalis. By contrast,undamaged leaves or feeding-damaged leaves without eggs did not attract wasp females. French bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) also emitted attractive synomones when they were damaged by host feeding and carrying e…

insect/plant interactionInsectaPhysiologyOvipositionmedia_common.quotation_subjectWaspsHymenopteraInsectAquatic ScienceBiologyPheromonesParasitoidHeteropteraPentatomidaeBotanyAnimalsInsecta Nezara viridula Heteroptera Pentatomidae Trissolcus basalis Scelionidae systemic induction oviposition insect/plant interaction chemical ecologyTrissolcus basalisMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOvummedia_commonScelionidaePhaseolusHost (biology)fungiNezara viridulachemical ecologyfood and beveragesFeeding Behaviorsystemic inductionPentatomidaebiology.organism_classificationInsecta; Nezara viridula; Heteroptera; Pentatomidae; Trissolcus basalis; Scelionidae; systemic induction; oviposition; insect/plant interaction; chemical ecologyVicia fabaSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataOlfactometerNezara viridulaInsect ScienceOdorantsembryonic structuresAnimal Science and ZoologyScelionidae
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The role of chemical cues in the host finding behaviour of Trissolcus basalis from a Conservation Biological Control perspective

In assessing successful biological control programs by parasitoids, the knowledge of important traits, such as the host finding capability, i.e. the ability to find host and food resources, play the key role. Moreover, parasitoids in their natural environment parasitoids deal with a variable mixtures of natural cues. Some chemical cues are used by the wasps to locate their hosts, some ones drive wasps to feeding resources. The parasitoid response to these cues can fluctuate according to biotic factors and abiotic condition. This dissertation focus in details on the role of two important tools, such as selective flowering plants as food resources to add within a crop area and the traces left…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataConservation biological control Habitat management wildflowers strip Trissolcus basalis footprints host-indirect related cues Electrophysiological and olfactometric responses footprints host location endogenous and exogenous factors.
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Effect of dual biotic stress on plant volatile synomones used by egg parasitoids

2014

Studies on semiochemical communication have demonstrated that broad bean plant, Vicia faba, emits volatile synomones induced by feeding and oviposition activities of the southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula, which recruit the egg parasitoid Trissolcus basalis. However plants growing in agro-ecosystems can be attacked by several herbivore species that could affect both above and belowground plant tissues with possible consequences for parasitoid recruitment. For example, broad bean plants can also be attacked by the leaf weevil, Sitona lineatus, and simultaneous attacks by the southern green stink bug and the leaf weevil can occur in agro- ecosystems. The purpose of this work was to inv…

Settore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicatasemiochemical aboveground insects below ground insects Trissolcus basalis
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Intraguild interaction between egg parasitoids: the role of the host egg mass size and parasitoids’ reproductive capacities

2013

In Sicily, field collections of egg masses of the southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula (L.) (Heteroptera:Pentatomidae), revealed that two solitary parasitoids, Trissolcus basalis (Wollaston) (Hymenoptera: Platygastridae) and Ooencyrtus telenomicida (Vassiliev) (Hymenoptera: Encyrtidae), can exploit the same egg mass. Previous finding showed that parasitoid species differ in host location and larval competitive abilities and a host finding-larval competition trade-off may be important for coexistence. The aim of this work was to evaluate the role played by the host egg mass size and the importance of species reproductive capacities in the outcome of interspecific competition. Under labo…

Nezara viridula Trissolcus basalis Ooencyrtus telenomicidaSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E Applicata
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