Effects of plant tissue factors on the acceptance of four greenhouse vegetable host plants by the greenhouse whitefly: an Electrical Penetration Graph (EPG) study
H. Lei et al., Effects of plant tissue factors on the acceptance of four greenhouse vegetable host plants by the greenhouse whitefly: an Electrical Penetration Graph (EPG) study, EUR J ENTOM, 98(1), 2001, pp. 31-36
A combination of biological control and host-plant resistance is needed to
control greenhouse whitefly, Trialeurodes vaporariorum (Westwood). The high
level of susceptibility of several host plants to whitefly, based on their
performance on these plants, is well documented. These studies only provid
e information on the overall host-plant acceptance by whiteflies. Here, we
use a method that allows an examination of the different tissue layers in t
he overall acceptance. The effects of plant tissue factors on whitefly prob
ing profiles were monitored using the electrical penetration graph (EPG) me
thod. The EPGs of whitefly originating from a culture on glasshouse cucumbe
r, were recorded for 8 hours on sweet pepper, tomato, gerbera and cucumber
plants produced in a glasshouse. On sweet pepper the graphs showed that whi
tefly made many short probes, had long xylem phases, short phloem phases, a
nd the shortest duration of first probes. An opposite probing profile was f
ound on cucumber: longer probes, shorter xylem phases, fewer phloem phases
but of longer duration, and longer first probes. The values of these parame
ters for gerbera and tomato were intermediate. Whiteflies encountered the g
reatest stimulation or the least resistance in the tissues of cucumber, and
the least stimulation or the greatest resistance in the tissues of sweet p
epper. Rejection of host plants probably occurred before the phloem tissue
was reached, as the probes prior to a whitefly leaving a host plant were so
short that the stylets cannot have reached the phloem. But phloem factors
also determine host-plant rejection, as phloem probing on sweet pepper - a
poor host plant - was much shorter than on the other host plants. Resistanc
e factors seem, therefore, to be located both in the epidermis/mesophyll an
d in the phloem. We hypothesize that the factors encountered by whitefly in
the different tissue layers during probing contribute to the acceptance or
rejection of a host plant. Based on the performance of whitefly on these p
lants, which is also reflected in the values of the EPG parameters, the ord
er of acceptance ranked from high to low is cucumber > tomato = gerbera > s
weet pepper.