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An Innate Preference of Bumblebees for Volatile Organic Compounds Emitted by Phaseolus vulgaris Plants Infected With Three Different Viruses

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Mhlanga, NM 
Murphy, AM 
Wamonje, FO 
Cunniffe, NJ 
Caulfield, JC 

Abstract

jats:pCucumber mosaic virus (CMV)-infected tomato (jats:italicSolanum lycopersicum</jats:italic> L.) plants emit volatile organic compounds (VOCs) attractive to bumblebees (jats:italicBombus terrestris</jats:italic> L.), which are important tomato pollinators, but which do not transmit CMV. We investigated if this effect was unique to the tomato-CMV pathosystem. In two bean (jats:italicPhaseolus vulgaris</jats:italic> L.) cultivars, infection with the potyviruses bean common mosaic virus (BCMV) or bean common mosaic necrosis virus (BCMNV), or with the cucumovirus CMV induced quantitative changes in VOC emission detectable by coupled gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. In free-choice olfactometry assays bumblebees showed an innate preference for VOC blends emitted by virus-infected non-flowering bean plants and flowering CMV-infected bean plants, over VOCs emitted by non-infected plants. Bumblebees also preferred VOCs of flowering BCMV-infected plants of the Wairimu cultivar over non-infected plants, but the preference was not significant for BCMV-infected plants of the Dubbele witte cultivar. Bumblebees did not show a significant preference for VOCs from BCMNV-infected flowering bean plants but differential conditioning olfactometric assays showed that bumblebees do perceive differences between VOC blends emitted by flowering BCMNV-infected plants over non-infected plants. These results are consistent with the concept that increased pollinator attraction may be a virus-to-host payback, and show that virus-induced changes in bee-attracting VOC emission is not unique to one virus-host combination.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

bumblebee, cucumovirus, innate preference, pollination, potyvirus, semiochemical, trade-off

Journal Title

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2296-701X
2296-701X

Volume Title

9

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/J011762/1)
Leverhulme Trust (F/09 741/F)
Leverhulme Trust (RPF-2012-667)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/P023223/1)
Royal Society (FCG\R1\201005)
Royal Society (via International Centre Of Insect Physiology & Ecology) (FLR\R1\190462)
Funded by grants from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC-SCPRID Grant BB/J011762/1 and BBSRC-GCRF Grant BB/P023223/1), and the Leverhulme Trust (F/09 741F), Royal Society (FCG\R1\201005) and the Cambridge-Africa-ALBORADA Research Fund. FOW is supported by a Royal Society-FLAIR Fellowship (FLR\R1\190462). NMM was supported by studentships from the Schlumberger Foundation, Cambridge Trust, and Magdalene College Cambridge.