RESUMO
In insects, the quality of sex pheromones plays a critical role in mating success and can be determined by the ability of larvae/adults to accrue chemical precursors. We tested the host-quality-effect hypothesis by analyzing the chemical composition of scent bouquets emitted by calling males of two polyphagous tephritid species (Anastrepha ludens and A. obliqua) that originated from 13 fruit species representing diverse plant families. In A. ludens, we worked with an ancestral host (Rutaceae), nine exotic ones (Rutaceae, Anacardiaceae, Rosaceae, Solanaceae, Lythraceae), and two species never attacked in nature but that represent candidates for host-range expansion (Solanaceae, Myrtaceae). In A. obliqua, we tested an ancestral, a native, and an exotic host (Anacardiaceae), one occasional (Myrtaceae), and one fruit never attacked in nature (Solanaceae). We identified a core scent bouquet and significant variation in the bouquet's composition depending on the fruit the larvae developed in. We also tested the possible microbial role on the scent bouquet by treating adults with antibiotics, finding a significant effect on quantity but not composition. We dwell on plasticity to partially explain our results and discuss the influence hosts could have on male competitiveness driven by variations in scent bouquet composition and how this could impact insect sterile technique programs.
RESUMO
Despite their enormous economic importance and the fact that there are almost 5000 tephritid (Diptera) species, fruit fly - host plant interactions are poorly understood from a chemical perspective. We analyzed the interactions among Anastrepha acris (a little studied monophagous tephritid) and its highly toxic host plant Hippomane mancinella from chemical, ecological and experimental perspectives, and also searched for toxicants from H. mancinella in the larval-pupal endoparasitoid Doryctobracon areolatus. We identified 18 phenolic compounds from H. mancinella pulp belonging to different chemical groups including phenylpropanoids, flavonoids, chalcones and coumarins. No traces of Hippomanin A were detected in larvae, pupae or A. acris adults, or in D. areolatus adults, implying that A. acris larvae can metabolize this toxicant, that as a result does not reach the third trophic level. We tested the "behavioral preference - lack of larval specialization-hypothesis" via feeding experiments with a larval rearing medium containing H. mancinella fruit (skin + pulp or pulp alone). The high toxicity of H. mancinella was confirmed as only two (out of 2520 in three experiments) A. ludens larvae (a polyphagous pest species that preferentially feeds on plants within the Rutaceae) survived without reaching the adult stage when fed on media containing H. mancinella, whereas A. acris larvae developed well and produced healthy adults. Together, these findings open a window of opportunity to study the detoxification mechanisms used by tephritid fruit flies.