Consumption and utilization of experimentally altered corn by southern armyworm: Iron, nitrogen, and cyclic hydroxamates
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Chemical Ecology
- Vol. 11 (11) , 1469-1483
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01012193
Abstract
The effects of differential leaf water, leaf nitrogen and cyclic hydroxamate (DIMBOA) concentrations in corn seedlings were analyzed for a polyphagous insect, the southern armyworm (Spodoptera eridania Cram.). Six different combinations of nutrients and allelochemicals [DIMBOA = 2,4-dihydroxy-7-methoxy(2H)-benzoxazin-3(4H)-one] were generated using two corn genotypes (WF9 and CI3IA) and three fertility regimes (complete nutrient, Fe-deficient, and N-deficient solutions) in the University Biotron. Poorest larval growth was observed in the low-nitrogen treatments (1.2% and 1.7% leaf N) and was the result of both low consumption rates and high metabolic costs (low efficiency of conversion of digested food, ECD). Fastest growth rates were observed forthe larvae fed leaves from the high-nitrogen treatments (4.6% and 4.4% leaf N). It is noteworthy that these treatments also contained the highest concentration of cyclic hydroxamates, which are generally believed to be the primary defensive chemicals mediating resistance against the European corn borer,Ostrinia nubilalis (Hubner). If these hydroxamates do have any deleterious or costly effects (perhaps accounting for a large portion of metabolic expenditures), the high digestibility of the leaf tissue and the increased consumption rates more than compensate, resulting in rapid growth (growth rate = consumption rate × approximate digestibility × efficiency of conversion of the digested food). These studies illustrate that variation in key nutrients and allelochemicals within a single plant species (Zea mays L.) may have significantly different effects upon various potential leaf-chewing caterpillars, such as these armyworms versus corn borers (which cannot handle the cyclic hydroxamates, even if provided with young nutritious leaf tissues).Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of cysteine on stability and toxicity to aphids of a cyclic hydroxamic acid from gramineaePhytochemistry, 1982
- The Mineral Nutrition of Higher PlantsAnnual Review of Plant Physiology, 1980
- Utilization of dry matter and bioelements in larvae of Neodiprion sertifer Geoffr. (Hym., Diprionidae) feeding on Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.)Oecologia, 1979
- Mechanism of iron uptake by plantsPlant, Cell & Environment, 1978
- Genotypic Differences in Nitrate Absorption and Partitioning of N Among Plant Parts in Maize1Crop Science, 1977
- Insect Nutrition: Current Developments and Metabolic ImplicationsAnnual Review of Entomology, 1973
- Genetic Nature of the Concentration of 2,4‐dihydroxy‐7‐methoxy 2H‐l,4‐benzoxazin‐ 3(4H)‐one and Resistance to the European Corn Borer in a Diallel Set of Eleven Maize Inbreds1Crop Science, 1970
- Effects of Low Levels of the Nutrient Content of a Food and of Nutrient Imbalance on the Feeding and the Nutrition of a Phytophagous Larva,Celerio euphorbiae(Linnaeus) (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae)The Canadian Entomologist, 1965
- Nutritional Requirements of Phytophagous InsectsAnnual Review of Entomology, 1958
- Egg-production in the Mustard Beetle, Phaedon cochleariae (F.) in Relation to Diets of Mineral-deficient LeavesBulletin of Entomological Research, 1955