Foraging adults of phytophagous insects are attracted by host-plant volatiles and supposedly repelled by volatiles from non-host plants. In behavioural control of pest insects, chemicals derived from non-host plants applied to crops are expected to repel searching adults and thereby reduce egg laying. How experience by searching adults of non-host volatiles affects their subsequent searching and oviposition behaviour has been rarely tested. In laboratory experiments, we examined the effect of experience of a non-host-plant extract on the oviposition behaviour of the diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella, a specialist herbivore of cruciferous plants. Naive ovipositing DBM females were repelled by an extract of dried leaves of Chrysanth...
Female insects have the difficult task of locating host plants that maximize the survival and succes...
Olfactory cues can determine the host preferences of herbivorous insects, but their role in host shi...
The role of olfactory cues for host search is much less investigated in day-active butterflies than ...
Experience can induce oviposition on nonhost plants, but little is known about the mechanisms underl...
The impact of three different doses of botanical insecticide derived from the syringa tree, Melia az...
A synthetic plant volatile‐based attractant has been commercialised for integrated pest management (...
1. Olfactory cues can determine the host preferences of herbivorous insects, but their role in host ...
International audienceThe chemical composition of plant surfaces plays a role in selection of host p...
Temporal changes in the pre- and post-alighting responses of mated female diamondback moth, Plutella...
Herbivorous and carnivorous arthropods use chemical information from plants during foraging. Aqueous...
The grapevine moth Lobesia botrana is a generalist insect herbivore and grapevine is one of its host...
The braconid Cotesia plutellae is an important larval parasitoid of the diamondback moth (Plutella x...
In response to insect herbivory, plants emit volatile organic compounds which may act as indirect pl...
Agricultural organisms, such as insect herbivores, provide unique opportunities for studies of adapt...
Elevated jasmonic acid (JA) concentrations in response to herbivory can induce wounded plants to pro...
Female insects have the difficult task of locating host plants that maximize the survival and succes...
Olfactory cues can determine the host preferences of herbivorous insects, but their role in host shi...
The role of olfactory cues for host search is much less investigated in day-active butterflies than ...
Experience can induce oviposition on nonhost plants, but little is known about the mechanisms underl...
The impact of three different doses of botanical insecticide derived from the syringa tree, Melia az...
A synthetic plant volatile‐based attractant has been commercialised for integrated pest management (...
1. Olfactory cues can determine the host preferences of herbivorous insects, but their role in host ...
International audienceThe chemical composition of plant surfaces plays a role in selection of host p...
Temporal changes in the pre- and post-alighting responses of mated female diamondback moth, Plutella...
Herbivorous and carnivorous arthropods use chemical information from plants during foraging. Aqueous...
The grapevine moth Lobesia botrana is a generalist insect herbivore and grapevine is one of its host...
The braconid Cotesia plutellae is an important larval parasitoid of the diamondback moth (Plutella x...
In response to insect herbivory, plants emit volatile organic compounds which may act as indirect pl...
Agricultural organisms, such as insect herbivores, provide unique opportunities for studies of adapt...
Elevated jasmonic acid (JA) concentrations in response to herbivory can induce wounded plants to pro...
Female insects have the difficult task of locating host plants that maximize the survival and succes...
Olfactory cues can determine the host preferences of herbivorous insects, but their role in host shi...
The role of olfactory cues for host search is much less investigated in day-active butterflies than ...