2002
DOI: 10.1046/j.1570-7458.2002.01001.x
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The effect of ozone fumigation and different Brassica rapa lines on the feeding behaviour of Pieris brassicae larvae

Abstract: Elevated levels of tropospheric ozone and their effects on plants have been studied for a great number of years. Ozone is a gaseous pollutant and acts as a phytotoxin. Even though ozone is known to change the physiology of plants, little attention has been given to the indirect effects of ozone on plant-insect interactions. This paper addresses this question by investigating the interactive effects of ozone and plant genotype on insects. Lines of rapid-cycling Brassica rapa (L.) selected for their contrasting … Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
(48 reference statements)
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“…It appears that 120 ppb might be beyond a critical threshold, altering the phenotype of plants and having adverse effects on P. brassicae performance beyond the point of recovery. These results support a previous study by Jøndrup et al (2002) in which they observed similar negative effects of ozone on the performance of P. brassicae on B. rapa plants, but the effects depended on the plant's sensitivity to ozone. On ozone-sensitive lines, P. brassicae larvae took longer to reach pupation on 75 ppb ozone-fumigated plants than clean air-fumigated controls, but there was no effect on pupal mass.…”
Section: The Effect Of Ozone On P Brassicae Performancesupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…It appears that 120 ppb might be beyond a critical threshold, altering the phenotype of plants and having adverse effects on P. brassicae performance beyond the point of recovery. These results support a previous study by Jøndrup et al (2002) in which they observed similar negative effects of ozone on the performance of P. brassicae on B. rapa plants, but the effects depended on the plant's sensitivity to ozone. On ozone-sensitive lines, P. brassicae larvae took longer to reach pupation on 75 ppb ozone-fumigated plants than clean air-fumigated controls, but there was no effect on pupal mass.…”
Section: The Effect Of Ozone On P Brassicae Performancesupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Foliar sucrose levels increase dose dependently in response to ozone exposure in both Beta vulgaris and Brassica napus (K€ ollner and Krause, 2003). In B. rapa, ozone induced starch accumulation was observed in resistant and sensitive lines, while soluble sugars increased in sensitive lines (Jøndrup et al, 2002). We did not deeply explore the nutritive properties of B. nigra, but found that ozone exposure had no significant effect on water or carbon content while a reduction in nitrogen content occurred at both elevated concentrations.…”
Section: The Effect Of Ozone On P Brassicae Performancementioning
confidence: 80%
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“…The quantitatively altered GS proWle of plants resulting from elevated CO 2 and O 3 could aVect the performance of various adapted and non-adapted herbivores and also involve predation eYciency of insects of higher trophic levels through altered emissions of volatile GS degradation products (Potting et al 1999;Schuler et al 1999b) in the future. DiVerential herbivore performance has been noted under elevated CO 2 (Reddy et al 2004) and O 3 (Jondrup et al 2002), but until now the role of secondary compounds such as glucosinolates in this response has not been Fig. 4 Interactions linking O 3 stress, plant hormones involved in signal transduction and glucosinolates (GSs).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%