Effects of Exposure to Differentially Stressed Pinus sylvestris Seedlings on the Susceptibility of Receivers to Feeding by the Large Pine Weevil
Sara Mashhadi Meyghani, Muhammad Usman Rasheed, James D. Blande

TL;DR
This study shows that Scots pine seedlings release volatile compounds when damaged, which can influence the feeding behavior of large pine weevils on nearby trees.
Contribution
The study demonstrates how damage-induced plant volatiles from different sources affect weevil behavior and plant susceptibility.
Findings
Weevils were more likely to orient toward control receivers initially but shifted to those exposed to specific damage-induced volatiles later.
Exposure to damage-induced volatiles led to more superficial feeding damage compared to deep damage in control plants.
Abstract
Plants release volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in response to herbivory or damage as part of an indirect defence strategy. These broadly defined damage-induced plant volatiles (DIPVs), include herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPVs). DIPVs elicit defence-related responses in neighbouring plants, which may influence herbivore behaviour. Although DIPVs have been studied in conifers, little is known about how they influence neighbouring plants and shape subsequent interactions with herbivores. We tested whether DIPVs released by damaged Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) seedlings alter the susceptibility of undamaged receivers to feeding by the large pine weevil (Hylobius abietis). A two-stage experiment examined the effects of exposure to VOCs from mechanically damaged, pine weevil-damaged, sawfly-damaged, and undamaged seedlings on neighbouring receivers. In the first stage, receivers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForest Insect Ecology and Management · Insect-Plant Interactions and Control · Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies
