Quantification of contact oviposition stimulants for black swallowtail butterfly,Papilio polyxenes, on the leaf surfaces of wild carrot,Daucus carota
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Chemical Ecology
- Vol. 22 (12) , 2341-2357
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02029551
Abstract
Ovipositing black swallowtail butterflies,Papilio polyxenes, make their final host-selection decisions on the basis of compounds present on the leaf surface. Little information is available, however, on the chemistry of leaf surfaces. The purpose of this study was to develop a technique to extract and quantify the concentrations of compounds from the leaf surfaces ofDaucus carota, one of the main host species forP. polyxenes, with particular reference to compounds already identified as contact oviposition stimulants, namelytrans-chlorogenic acid (CA) and luteolin-7-O-(6″-O-malonyl)-β-d-glucopyranoside (L7MG), as well as its degradation product luteolin-7-glucoside (L7G). Plant surfaces were extracted by dipping leaves sequentially in pairs of solvents: (1) CHCl3-MeOH, (2) near-boiling H2O, (3) CHCl3-near-boiling H2O, and (4) CH2Cl2-CH2Cl2. The resulting extracts were fractionated and analyzed using high-performance liquid chromatography. The leaf-surface concentrations of each compound were calculated using regressions relating leaf surface area to leaf weight that were obtained from measurements of field-collected carrot plants. All four methods removed the three compounds from carrot leaf surfaces, but the solvent systems differed in effectiveness. The chloroform-near-boiling water solvent system performed better than the other solvent combinations, but not significantly so. This system also extracted the highest number of polar, UV-absorbing compounds. Methylene chloride was significantly less efficient than the other methods. An additional test confirmed that the chloroform-near-boiling water method removed compounds from the surface alone and probably not from the apoplast or symplast. Surface concentrations of CA (up to 600 ng/cm2 leaf surface) were substantially greater than those of the two flavonoid compounds. No clear seasonal trend in concentrations was evident from the limited number of sampling dates.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chemicals on the leaf surface, information about the plant available to insectsEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 1996
- Oviposition and chemosensory stimulation of the root flies Delia radicum and D. floralis in response to plants and leaf surface extracts from resistant and susceptible Brassica genotypesEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 1996
- Use of dental wax for the study of insect behavior by scanning electron microscopyMicroscopy Research and Technique, 1993
- External and vacuolar flavonoids of Ribes viscossisimumBiochemical Systematics and Ecology, 1993
- Flavonoids and Affinities of Greyiaceae with a Discussion of the Occurrence of B-Ring Deoxyflavonoids in Dicotyledonous FamiliesSystematic Botany, 1992
- Leaf surface flavonoids of Eriodictyon trichocalyxBiochemical Systematics and Ecology, 1990
- Larval Growth and Survivorship of the Black Swallowtail Butterfly in Central New YorkEcological Monographs, 1985
- Leaf-scratching — a specialized behaviour of danaine butterflies (Lepidoptera) for gathering secondary plant substancesOecologia, 1983
- Chemical Aspects of Oviposition Behavior in ButterfliesPublished by Elsevier ,1983
- Life history variation in the black swallowtail butterflyOecologia, 1981