dc.description.abstract |
Busseola fusca (Fuller) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) is an important pest of maize and
sorghum in sub-Saharan Africa whose larvae exhibits oligophagic than polyphagic
feeding habits. The host plants for this species are primarily maize and sorghum
though some populations appear to be restricted on wild sorghum. The purpose of
this study was to determine the extent of oligophagy of larvae of this species based
on (i) the sensory abilities to discriminate among different host plants (ii) feeding
behaviour and growth on different Poaceae plant species present in its natural
habitat (iii) plant stimuli that influence larval growth and feeding and (iv) the
physiological adaptations to various host plant diets. The potential existence of
genetically determined host-plant associated populations was also investigated. The
results obtained from scanning microscopic preparations, selective silver nitrate
staining and dose response electrophysiological experiments indicate that larval
sensory structures present on the maxillae and the antennae are typical of other
lepidopteran species and consist mainly of multiporous olfactory and uniporous
gustatory sensilla. These sensorial equipments are thought to be involved in
discriminating amongst chemical cues important for larval host recognition and
selection. The gustatory role of both sensorial equipments was confirmed from the
significant and positive dose-response electrophysiological tip recording tests, for
the antennal sensillum (F1,56 = 41.637, P<0.0001) and for the maxillary palp (F1,58 =
32.124, P<0.0001) using increasing concentrations of sucrose. Moreover, this study
demonstrated for the first time the presence of antennal taste receptors on a
lepidopteran larva key to host choice, explaining the ability of larvae to quickly
evaluate the phago-suitability of the host plant following landing on its surface.
xx
Among the selected Poacaeae plant species used and which form the natural feeding
repertoire of B. fusca, only Zea mays and Sorghum arundinaceum supported the
highest larval performance. Endogenous silica which is thought to negatively
influence feeding behaviour of many herbivorous insects, varied significantly
among the plant species studied. The amount of silica found among the plant
extracts studied ranged between 20μg/mg-55μg/mg of dry leaf weight following
spectrophotometric determination of each of the plant leaf samples digested with
dilute hydrofluoric acid. The silica levels in the plants’s digests correlated
negatively with both larval feeding and growth rates, hence confirming the
importance of silica as a significant barrier to dietary adaptation by B. fusca larvae.
All the polar and methanol-soluble plant extracts tested elicited feeding of third
instar larva as compared to the non-polar hexane extracts both in choice and in nonchoice
bioassays. Methanol extracts of Z. mays, S. arundinaceum and Arundo donax
were however the most phagostimulatory. Plant sugar content as identified by HPLC
also varied among plants tested with sucrose contributing the highest (22μg/mg to
65μg/mg of dry leaf weight), which was an equivalent of between 25%-38% of the
total sugar content of each plant leaf extract analysed. Larval feeding positively
correlated with sucrose content but negatively with turanose, the most variable sugar
fraction (5-36μg/mg dry leaf weight) of the plant extracts analysed. However,
additional bioassays indicated that whereas turanose and sucrose play a
phagodeterrent and phagostimulant roles respectively, a balance between the two
(probably in the ratio of 3:1 respectively) appeared to be an important factor in host
acceptance for larval feeding. Therefore, the level of silica and the balance between
xxi
the two sugars in the plant leaves seem to be key determinants of host plant choice
and acceptance for feeding and growth by B. fusca larvae.
Larvae fed on Z. mays and S. arundinaceum; plants that supported the highest larval
survival and growth rates had pronounced levels of sugar than amino acid degrading
enzymes, indicating the general over reliance of larvae on carbohydrates over
proteins for survival. However, esterase enzymes were also highly induced in
homogenates of larvae that consumed leaves of their least preferred host plants that
included P. maximum P. desteum and S. megaphylla. These three plant species had
also the highest total phenolic content in their leaf tissues following
spectrophotometric determination of the same in their leave tissues. Therefore, the
induction of esterase in larvae fed on the three high phenolic containing plants could
possibly indicate the accompanying physiological responses of larvae to a specific
or a number of deterrent phenolic glycosides in the particular plant leaf tissue.
Finally, no conclusive evidence was deduced for host associated genetic
differentiation among individuals of B. fusca larva found on wild plants (A. donax)
or cultivated crops (Z. mays) as was inferred from genetic analysis of two fragments
of the gene coding for cytochrome b. |
en_US |