Coffee Berry Borer Joins Bark Beetles in Coffee Klatch


Autoria(s): Jaramillo, Juliana; Torto, Baldwyn; Mwenda, Dickson; Troeger, Armin; Borgemeister, Christian; Poehling, Hans-Michael; Francke, Wittko
Data(s)

20/09/2013

Resumo

Unanswered key questions in bark beetle-plant interactions concern host finding in species attacking angiosperms in tropical zones and whether management strategies based on chemical signaling used for their conifer-attacking temperate relatives may also be applied in the tropics. We hypothesized that there should be a common link in chemical signaling mediating host location by these Scolytids. Using laboratory behavioral assays and chemical analysis we demonstrate that the yellow-orange exocarp stage of coffee berries, which attracts the coffee berry borer, releases relatively high amounts of volatiles including conophthorin, chalcogran, frontalin and sulcatone that are typically associated with Scolytinae chemical ecology. The green stage of the berry produces a much less complex bouquet containing small amounts of conophthorin but no other compounds known as bark beetle semiochemicals. In behavioral assays, the coffee berry borer was attracted to the spiroacetals conophthorin and chalcogran, but avoided the monoterpenes verbenone and a-pinene, demonstrating that, as in their conifer-attacking relatives in temperate zones, the use of host and non-host volatiles is also critical in host finding by tropical species. We speculate that microorganisms formed a common basis for the establishment of crucial chemical signals comprising inter-and intraspecific communication systems in both temperate-and tropical-occurring bark beetles attacking gymnosperms and angiosperms.

Identificador

http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/287

http://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/309

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

San Francisco : Public Library Science

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074277

ESSN:1932-6203

Direitos

CC BY 4.0

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

frei zugänglich

Fonte

PloS ONE 8 (2013), Nr. 9

Palavras-Chave #mountain pine-beetle #dendroctonus-ponderosae hopkins #hypothenemus-hampei ferrari #redbay ambrosia beetle #coleoptera-curculionidae #chemical ecology #baited traps #secondary attraction #pheromone production #antennal responses #ddc:590
Tipo

status-type:publishedVersion

doc-type:article

doc-type:Text