| Literature DB >> 27845388 |
Meizhen Lin1,2,3, Liette Vasseur1,4, Guang Yang1,2,3, Geoff M Gurr1,2,5, Minsheng You1,2,3.
Abstract
Rain and dew droplets can dislodge or drown small insects and may be important factors that drive adaptations for avoidance and escape. Studying the microstructure of small insects and insect behaviour can help understand these adaptations. We quantified avoidance behaviour and entrapment of nymphs and adults of the tea green leafhopper (Empoasca onukii) using simulated rainfall onto host plant foliage and made observations of pretarsi and abdomen microstructures. Adults responded rapidly to simulated rainfall and escaped by jumping whilst most young nymphs were washed from water-sprayed leaves though older nymphs tended to remain on leaves and subsequently escaped from water droplets. Adults had denser covering of water-repelling brochosomes on pretarsi and abdomen surface than nymphs, and were able to stand on water film whilst most nymphs had multiple penetrating tarsi. Removal of brochosomes from the abdomen of adults reduced hydrophobicity, demonstrating the hydrophobic significance of brochosomes in the capacity of leafhopper to escape from water droplets. Nymphs exhibited a higher pull-off force than adults. This research is one of the few studies to focus on the wettability and water avoidance of small insect pests and has implications for pest management.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27845388 PMCID: PMC5109466 DOI: 10.1038/srep37026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Escape behaviour of four life stages of Empoasca onukii in response to water spraying.
| Stage | Behaviour/outcome | Proportional rate of successful escape (n = 20) | Mean escape time of escaped individuals (s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| N1 | All trapped in the water and rapidly washed away | 0 | — |
| N2~N3 | Most trapped in water droplets and able to crawl from droplets only slowly after cessation of spraying | 0.15 | 48.7 ± 3.05 |
| N4~N5 | Minority trapped in water droplets and able to crawl from droplets relatively rapidly after cessation of spraying | 0.85 | 17.4 ± 2.78 |
| Adult | Jumping away during spraying | 1.0 | 0.26 ± 0.02 |
Water was sprayed for 1 minute to adults and immatures of various nymphal (N) stages. The proportional rate of successful escape was calculated in the 2 minutes after the cessation of spraying for 1 min.
Figure 1Escape behaviour of the 5th instar E. onukii nymph from a simulated raindrop on the abaxial surface of a tea leaf.
(A) Entrapment of the nymph in simulated raindrop; and (B) Crawling away of the nymph from the simulated raindrop. Scale bars: 1 mm.
Figure 2SEM images of pretarsus of Empoasca onukii.
(A) foreleg of adult; (B) middle leg of adult; (C) hind leg of adult; (D) surface of the arolium in foreleg pretarsus of adult; (E) foreleg of nymph; (F) middle leg of nymph; (G) hind leg of nymph; and (H) surface of the arolium in foreleg pretarsus of nymph. (BR) brochosomes; (PU) pulvillus; (AR) arolium; (CL) claw.
Figure 3SEM images of the E. onukii abdomen.
(A–E) are images of abdomen cuticle with intact integuments, while (a–e) are images of abdomen cuticle with artificially bared integument. (A) and (a) represent adult dorsal abdomen; (B) and (b) represent the adult ventral abdomen; (C) and (c) represent nymph (1st to 5th) dorsal abdomen; (D) and (d) represent the ventral abdomen of younger nymph (1st and 2nd); (E) and (e) represent the ventral abdomen of older nymph (3rd to 5th); BR represent brochosomes. Scale bars: 1 μm for (D) and 10 μm for others. In (D) the size of brochosomes are similar to the micropapillae, and in (E) brochosmomes on the ventral abdomen of the nymph are clumped and have not been spread over its body.
Figure 4Contact angle values of water on the surface of the E. onukii adult and old nymph abdomen (ventral and dorsal) with or without the presence of brochosomes. Intact bars (dark grey with dots): leafhopper integument with brochosomes; bared bars (pale gray): leafhopper integument without brochosomes. Error bars indicate standard deviation.
Figure 5The pull-off force of pretarsus and abdomen.
(a) Comparison of the pull-off (black bars for leaf interface and gray bars for water interface) and gravity (white bars) forces generated at the insect pretarsi and tea leaf interfaces as well as at the insect pretarsi and water interfaces for adults versus nymphs of E. onukii; and (b) Comparison the pull-off force between the intact integument (dark grey bars with dots) and artificially bared integument (pale gray bars) forces generated at the insect abdomen-water interfaces for adults versus nymphs of E. onukii. Error bars indicate standard deviation.