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1 February 2007 Physiological Response of Glandular-Haired Alfalfa to Potato Leafhopper (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) Injury
W. O. Lamp, L. C. Alexander, M. Nguyen
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Abstract

Plant tolerance to herbivory is a key approach for managing pests. In alfalfa, Medicago sativa, the potato leafhopper, Empoasca fabae, is a major pest as a result of the cascade of plant responses to piercing-sucking injury. To identify tolerance to its injury based on alfalfa physiology, experiments were conducted in the field and greenhouse. In our comparison of the response of field-grown alfalfa cultivars to standardized leafhopper densities, net photosynthesis and transpiration rates of ‘Geneva’ leaves were reduced by 18 and 21%, respectively, by leafhopper presence compared with a rate change of <1% of resistant ‘EverGreen’ leaves. Under greenhouse conditions, alfalfa clones varied in their level of gas exchange (net photosynthesis and transpiration) and stem elongation responses to leafhopper injury. For example, in the comparison of seven clones, net photosynthesis declined an average of 40.7% with leafhopper injury, although individual clones varied from 26.6 to 74.3% reduction. Internode elongation after 2 d was 60.3% less on injured stems compared with healthy stems, but again, the individual clones varied from 17.3 to 91.9%. In a time-course study of selected clones, clones varied in their level of injury just after and 3 d after insect removal. Gas exchange responses of all clones recovered by 7 d after cessation of injury. In a choice test, leafhoppers spent similar amounts of time on the susceptible clone and the most tolerant clone; however, their precise feeding behaviors were not measured. Thus, the variable response of clones to injury may be either true physiological tolerance or antixenosis from a change in feeding behavior. This study showed putative tolerance to leafhopper injury among alfalfa genotypes, suggesting that tolerance could be the basis for crop protection in alfalfa from potato leafhopper injury.

W. O. Lamp, L. C. Alexander, and M. Nguyen "Physiological Response of Glandular-Haired Alfalfa to Potato Leafhopper (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) Injury," Environmental Entomology 36(1), 195-203, (1 February 2007). https://doi.org/10.1603/0046-225X(2007)36[195:PROGAT]2.0.CO;2
Received: 30 May 2006; Accepted: 1 November 2006; Published: 1 February 2007
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KEYWORDS
Empoasca fabae
host plant resistance
photosynthesis
plant tolerance
sap-feeding
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