R.P.J. Potting
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by R.P.J. Potting.
Journal of Chemical Ecology | 1995
R.P.J. Potting; Louise E. M. Vet; Marcel Dicke
The origin of olfactory stimuli involved in the host microhabitat location inCotesia flavipes, a parasitoid of stem-borer larvae, was investigated in a Y-tube olfactometer. The response of femaleC. flavipes towards different components of the plant-host complex, consisting of a maize plant infested with two or more larvae of the stem borerChilo partellus, was tested in dualchoice tests. The concealed lifestyle of the stem-borer larvae did not limit the emission of volatiles attractive to a parasitoid. A major source of the attractive volatiles from the plant-host complex was the stem-borer-injured stem, including the frass produced by the feeding larvae. Moreover, the production of volatiles attractive to a parasitoid was not restricted to the infested stem part but occurs systemically throughout the plant. The uninfested leaves of a stem-borer-infested plant were found to emit volatiles that attract femaleC. flavipes. We further demonstrate that an exogenous elicitor of this systemic plant response is situated in the regurgitate of a stem-borer larva. When a minor amount of regurgitate is inoculated into the stem of an uninfested plant, the leaves of the treated plant emit volatiles that attract femaleC. flavipes.
Animal Behaviour | 2012
Rieta Gols; Chris Veenemans; R.P.J. Potting; Hans M. Smid; Marcel Dicke; Jeffrey A. Harvey; Tibor Bukovinszky
Herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPV) provide important information that influences host location behaviour for insect natural enemies, such as parasitoid wasps, that develop in the bodies of herbivorous insects. The dietary breadth of both the parasitoid and its host may affect the extent to which a searching parasitoid relies on HIPV. Specialist species are expected to rely on specific volatile cues to which they respond innately, whereas generalists are expected to show a higher degree of phenotypic plasticity that depends on foraging experience in the parasitoid. We compared the response to HIPV emitted by different plant species damaged by host and nonhost caterpillars for two congeneric parasitoid species, the specialist Diadegma semiclausum and the generalist Diadegma fenestrale, attacking caterpillars of the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella. For the three tested plant species, Brassica oleracea, a feral Brassica population and Sinapis alba, both parasitoid species preferred volatiles from host-infested plants over those produced by undamaged plants. However, both parasitoid species only distinguished between volatiles induced by host and nonhosts when the caterpillars had been feeding on B. oleracea, the plant on which they had been reared. Chemical analysis of the volatile blends could not explain volatile preferences of the parasitoids. Despite the difference in their dietary breadth, the two parasitoids responded similarly to HIPV and experience treatments. A flexible response to a wide array of volatile blends by parasitoids is probably important in nature, given that different generations of the host and the parasitoid probably develop on different food plants.
Oikos | 2005
Tibor Bukovinszky; R.P.J. Potting; Yann Clough; Joop C. van Lenteren; Louise E. M. Vet
Bulletin of Entomological Research | 1997
R.P.J. Potting; Louise E. M. Vet; William A. Overholt
Pest Management Science | 2002
Peter Lösel; R.P.J. Potting; Dirk Ebbinghaus; Jürgen Scherkenbeck
Bulletin of Entomological Research | 1997
R.P.J. Potting; Louise E. M. Vet; William A. Overholt
Landscape Management for Functional Biodiversity | 2003
Tibor Bukovinszky; R.P.J. Potting; Y. Clough; J.C. van Lenteren; L.E.M. Vet
Archive | 2004
Tibor Bukovinszky; R.P.J. Potting; J.C. van Lenteren; L.E.M. Vet
Chemical Physics Letters | 2004
R.P.J. Potting; Tibor Bukovinszky; J.C. van Lenteren
Archive | 2003
R.P.J. Potting; J.C. van Lenteren