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Host plant preference and offspring performance of a leaf‐mining moth, C aloptilia fraxinella , on two F raxinus species
Author(s) -
Wist Tyler J.,
Evenden Maya L.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
entomologia experimentalis et applicata
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.765
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1570-7458
pISSN - 0013-8703
DOI - 10.1111/eea.12442
Subject(s) - biology , host (biology) , larva , fraxinus , botany , lepidoptera genitalia , horticulture , emerald ash borer , zoology , ecology
Abstract The preference‐performance or ‘mother‐knows‐best’ hypothesis states that female insects choose to oviposit on a host plant that increases the performance of their offspring. This positive link between host plant choice and larval performance is especially important for leaf miners with non‐motile larvae that are entirely dependent upon the oviposition choice of the female for host plant location. Preference and performance of the ash leaf coneroller, C aloptilia fraxinella ( E ly) ( L epidoptera: G racillariidae), a specialist on ash trees, F raxinus spp. ( O leaceae), were tested in a series of laboratory and field experiments. Female C . fraxinella were exposed to two closely related hosts, black ash, F raxinus nigra M arshall, and green ash, F raxinus pennsylvanica M arshall var. subintegerrima ( V ahl), in oviposition choice and wind tunnel flight experiments to determine which host is most attractive for oviposition. C aloptilia fraxinella females were inconsistent in host choice, yet performance of larvae was greater on green than black ash. In preference studies, C . fraxinella preferred to oviposit on black ash when leaflets were removed from the tree, but preferred intact green ash over black ash seedlings for oviposition and host location in a wind tunnel. In the field, however, more C . fraxinella visited black ash var. ‘Fallgold’ at leaf flush than green ash at the same sites. Age of the ash leaflet also influences oviposition in this leaf miner and females preferred new over old leaflets for oviposition. Performance of C . fraxinella larvae was evaluated in field and laboratory experiments and was greater on green ash than on black ash in both experiments based on larval survival and development time parameters. The stronger oviposition and host location preference in the field for black ash were not linked to enhanced performance of offspring, as green ash was the superior host, supporting higher larval survival and faster development. A stronger host location preference in the wind tunnel for green ash over black ash, however, suggests that under certain circumstances with this moth species, ‘mother (may) know best’.