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Associative learning in the ovipositional behaviour of the cabbage butterfly, Pieris rapae
Author(s) -
TRAYNIER R. M. M.
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
physiological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.693
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1365-3032
pISSN - 0307-6962
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3032.1984.tb00789.x
Subject(s) - pieris rapae , biology , butterfly , larva , sinigrin , host (biology) , lepidoptera genitalia , zoology , botany , horticulture , ecology , glucosinolate , brassica
. When tested with familiar and novel oviposition sites, gravid female Pieris rapae (L.) tended to land on sites of the same appearance as those they had experienced 24 h earlier. This acquired preference could be reversed by subsequent e xperience. An ovipositional preference, shown by groups of insects, paralleled the landing preferences of single insects. These influences of experience were shown with intact cabbage plants of different kinds, with discs cut from the leaves of different kinds of cabbage, and with discs of blotting paper of different shades of green and blue, wetted with sinigrin solution or water. A single landing by a gravid female on paper wetted with sinigrin solution induced a landing preference for the same colour of paper in a choice test made 24 h later. Gravid females thus associated a favourable chemical stimulus of oviposition with the appearance of the acceptable site. Such learning by trial and error would facilitate host‐selection from a distance. In the laboratory it induced oviposition on ‘neutral’ sites of the same appearance as ‘host’ sites.

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