Molecular interrogation of the feeding behaviour of field captured individual insects for interpretation of multiple host plant use

PLoS One. 2012;7(9):e44435. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044435. Epub 2012 Sep 19.

Abstract

The way in which herbivorous insect individuals use multiple host species is difficult to quantify under field conditions, but critical to understanding the evolutionary processes underpinning insect-host plant relationships. In this study we developed a novel approach to understanding the host plant interactions of the green mirid, Creontiades dilutus, a highly motile heteropteran bug that has been associated with many plant species. We combine quantified sampling of the insect across its various host plant species within particular sites and a molecular comparison between the insects' gut contents and available host plants. This approach allows inferences to be made as to the plants fed upon by individual insects in the field. Quantified sampling shows that this "generalist" species is consistently more abundant on two species in the genus Cullen (Fabaceae), its primary host species, than on any other of its numerous listed hosts. The chloroplast intergenic sequences reveal that C. dilutus frequently feeds on plants additional to the one from which it was collected, even when individuals were sampled from the primary host species. These data may be reconciled by viewing multiple host use in this species as an adaptation to survive spatiotemporally ephemeral habitats. The methodological framework developed here provides a basis from which new insights into the feeding behaviour and host plant relationships of herbivorous insects can be derived, which will benefit not only ecological interpretation but also our understanding of the evolution of these relationships.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ecosystem
  • Fabaceae / physiology*
  • Feeding Behavior / physiology*
  • Hemiptera / physiology*
  • Insecta
  • Molecular Sequence Data

Associated data

  • GENBANK/JX134132
  • GENBANK/JX134133
  • GENBANK/JX134134
  • GENBANK/JX134135
  • GENBANK/JX134136
  • GENBANK/JX134137
  • GENBANK/JX134138
  • GENBANK/JX134139
  • GENBANK/JX134140
  • GENBANK/JX134141
  • GENBANK/JX134142
  • GENBANK/JX134143
  • GENBANK/JX134144
  • GENBANK/JX134145
  • GENBANK/JX134146
  • GENBANK/JX134147
  • GENBANK/JX134148
  • GENBANK/JX134149
  • GENBANK/JX134150
  • GENBANK/JX134151
  • GENBANK/JX134152
  • GENBANK/JX134153
  • GENBANK/JX134154
  • GENBANK/JX134155
  • GENBANK/JX134156
  • GENBANK/JX134157
  • GENBANK/JX134158
  • GENBANK/JX134159
  • GENBANK/JX134160
  • GENBANK/JX134161
  • GENBANK/JX134162
  • GENBANK/JX134163
  • GENBANK/JX134164
  • GENBANK/JX134165
  • GENBANK/JX134166
  • GENBANK/JX134167
  • GENBANK/JX134168
  • GENBANK/JX134169
  • GENBANK/JX134170
  • GENBANK/JX134171
  • GENBANK/JX134172
  • GENBANK/JX134173
  • GENBANK/JX134174
  • GENBANK/JX134175
  • GENBANK/JX134176
  • GENBANK/JX134177
  • GENBANK/JX134178
  • GENBANK/JX134179
  • GENBANK/JX134180
  • GENBANK/JX134181
  • GENBANK/JX134182
  • GENBANK/JX134183
  • GENBANK/JX134184
  • GENBANK/JX134185
  • GENBANK/JX134186
  • GENBANK/JX134187
  • GENBANK/JX134188
  • GENBANK/JX134189
  • GENBANK/JX134190
  • GENBANK/JX134191
  • GENBANK/JX134192
  • GENBANK/JX134193
  • GENBANK/JX134194
  • GENBANK/JX134195
  • GENBANK/JX134196
  • GENBANK/JX134197
  • GENBANK/JX134198
  • GENBANK/JX134199
  • GENBANK/JX134200
  • GENBANK/JX134201
  • GENBANK/JX134202
  • GENBANK/JX134203
  • GENBANK/JX134204
  • GENBANK/JX134205
  • GENBANK/JX134206
  • GENBANK/JX134207
  • GENBANK/JX134208
  • GENBANK/JX134209
  • GENBANK/JX134210
  • GENBANK/JX134211
  • GENBANK/JX134212
  • GENBANK/JX134213
  • GENBANK/JX134214
  • GENBANK/JX134215
  • GENBANK/JX134216
  • GENBANK/JX134217
  • GENBANK/JX134218
  • GENBANK/JX134219
  • GENBANK/JX134220
  • GENBANK/JX134221

Grants and funding

This project was funded through a Phd stipend awarded to JPH by the Cotton Research and Development Corporation and the Cotton Cathcment Communities Co-operative Research Centre, Australia. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.