| Literature DB >> 19127385 |
Fredric V Vencl1, Nélida E Gómez, Kerstin Ploss, Wilhelm Boland.
Abstract
Larval insect herbivores feeding externally on leaves are vulnerable to numerous and varied enemies. Larvae of the Neotropical herbivore, Chelymorpha alternans (Chrysomelidae:Cassidinae), possess shields made of cast skins and feces, which can be aimed and waved at attacking enemies. Prior work with C. alternans feeding on Merremia umbellata (Convolvulaceae) showed that shields offered protection from generalist predators, and polar compounds were implicated. This study used a ubiquitous ant predator, Azteca lacrymosa, in field bioassays to determine the chemical constitution of the defense. We confirmed that intact shields do protect larvae and that methanol-water leaching significantly reduced shield effectiveness. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) of the methanolic shield extract revealed two peaks at 20.18 min and 21.97 min, both with a molecular ion at m/z 593.4, and a strong UV absorption around 409 nm, suggesting a porphyrin-type compound. LC-MS analysis of a commercial standard confirmed pheophorbide a (Pha) identity. C. alternans shields contained more than 100 microg Pha per shield. Shields leached with methanol-water did not deter ants. Methanol-water-leached shields enhanced with 3 microg of Pha were more deterrent than larvae with solvent-leached shields, while those with 5 microg additional Pha provided slightly less deterrence than larvae with intact shields. Solvent-leached shields with 10 microg added Pha were comparable to intact shields, even though the Pha concentration was less than 10% of its natural concentration. Our findings are the first to assign an ecological role for a chlorophyll catabolite as a deterrent in an insect defense.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19127385 PMCID: PMC2758384 DOI: 10.1007/s10886-008-9577-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Ecol ISSN: 0098-0331 Impact factor: 2.626
Fig. 1Larva of aC. alternans showing the fecal shield (arrow) above the larval dorsum (bar = 2 mm); b the A. lacrymosa nest (upper arrow) and bioassay arena (lower arrow)
Fig. 2Chromatographic separation and identification of chlorophyll catabolites from fecal shields of C. alternans. a LC-MS profile of the methanolic extract of larval shields (straight line) and the pheophorbide a standard (dotted line). The two peaks for Pha represent epimeric esters of ring V (Smith et al. 1985), Pha (R = CH3), Phb (R = CHO), (asterisks) unknown compounds. b UV spectra of Pha (straight line) and Phb (dotted line)
Fig. 3Survival curves showing capture rates of C. alternans larvae with intact, pheophorbide a-augmented, or methanol control shields in the Azteca ant bioassay. Leached shields were enhanced with either 3 μg/shield (grey circles) or 5 μg/shield (dark grey circles) concentrations of pheophorbide a. Larval controls (open circles) had their shields leached (methanol and water), modified with 50 μl of MeOH, and then reattached. Intact shields (solid circles) were removed and reattached to larvae without leaching or the addition of any substances. Data from the 1 μg and 10 μg additions of Pha were excluded for the sake of clarity. The former treatment was not different from zero Pha, and the latter treatment did not differ from larvae with intact shields. Bars are the standard error of the life table estimate. Samples sizes: 3 μg = 36, 5 μg = 34, solvent control = 41, and intact shields = 32