Eb. Brennan et Sa. Weinbaum, Psyllid responses to colored sticky traps and the colors of juvenile and adult leaves of the heteroblastic host plant Eucalyptus globulus, ENV ENTOMOL, 30(2), 2001, pp. 365-370
Heteroblasty describes plants with juvenile and adult vegetative shoots tha
t differ morphologically. Virtually nothing is known about the affects of t
his source of within-plant variation on host-plant selection by herbivorous
insects. This is the first study on the use of visual cues by insects that
specialize on different shoot types of a heteroblastic plant. Two psyllid
species (Ctenarytaina eucalypti Maskell and C. spatulata Taylor) specialize
on glaucous juvenile and glossy adult shoots of Eucalyptus globulus Labill
., respectively. We compared their responses to artificial colors and to th
e colors of expanding and expanded juvenile versus adult leaves. Sticky tra
ps were used to compare psyllid response to seven artificial colors. A "col
or tube" was developed to compare psyllid responses to leaf color. Both psy
llid species preferred yellow traps over all other colors (red, blue, green
, white, and clear), and color preference was independent of species. Both
species were also more attracted to the colors of expanding and expanded ju
venile leaves than to adult leaves. Although the psyllids perceived differe
nces between the colors of juvenile and adult leaves of E. globulus, their
responses suggest that leaf color alone is not the basis of discrimination
between foliage types.