The Effect of Scale Insects on Growth Parameters of cv. Chardonnay and cv. Sauvignon Blanc Grapevines Grown in a Greenhouse

Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Jan 12;24(2):1544. doi: 10.3390/ijms24021544.

Abstract

Plants can respond to insects that feed with stylet mouthparts using various processes that are initiated via the salicylic acid metabolic pathway. In Australia, scale insects of the genus Parthenolecanium can cause economic damage to grapevines as they feed on the vines and produce honeydew as a waste by-product, which supports the growth of black sooty mould on fruit and leaves, potentially affecting the plant growth and yield. Using rootlings of Sauvignon Blanc (SB, resistant) and Chardonnay (Char, susceptible), the growth and production of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) following exposure to scale insect infestations were measured under controlled greenhouse conditions. At harvest, the numbers of scale insects per five leaves were higher on plants infested at the start of the study compared with the control plants. Infested SB had increased dry root and shoot mass compared with the SB control, which was also the case with Char (control and infested). Leaf volatiles differed between cultivars in response to scale infestation. Benzyl alcohol decreased among infested SB plants compared with the other treatments. A change in the salicylic acid pathway as indicated by the change in benzyl alcohol may cause the increased growth in SB associated with the increased scale insect infestation.

Keywords: HS-SPME-GC/MS; Parthenolecanium; Vitis vinifera L.; cultivar differences; genotype specific response; grapevine pests; grapevine volatiles; overcompensation; salicylic acid (SA) pathway.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Benzyl Alcohols / metabolism
  • Fungi
  • Hemiptera* / physiology
  • Metabolic Networks and Pathways
  • Vitis* / metabolism

Substances

  • Benzyl Alcohols

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding, as all funding was from the Research School of Biology.