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Author

V. F. Eastop

Bio: V. F. Eastop is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Uroleucon. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 380 citations.
Topics: Uroleucon

Papers
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Book
01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: This book presents a systematic treatment of aphids in the context of regionally classified faunal works (supplementary to Blackman and Eastop, 2000), which aims to clarify the status of aphid genera and provide a ontological basis for their recognition.
Abstract: Preface. Volume 1. Host Lists and Keys. Introduction. Host Plant Lists and Identification Keys (in alphabetical order of plant genera). Key to apterae of polyphagous aphids. Volume 2. The Aphids. Introduction. Regionally classified faunal works (supplementary to Blackman and Eastop, 2000). Systematic Treatment of Aphids (in alphabetical order of genera). References. Photographic Guide. Index to Species Names of Aphids.

413 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work identifies general patterns of resistance, with a special focus on recognition, phytohormonal signalling, secondary metabolites and induction of plant resistance, and discusses how host specialization can enable aphids to co-opt both thephytoh hormonal responses and defensive compounds of plants for their own benefit at a local scale.
Abstract: Aphids are important herbivores of both wild and cultivated plants. Plants rely on unique mechanisms of recognition, signalling and defence to cope with the specialized mode of phloem feeding by aphids. Aspects of the molecular mechanisms underlying aphid-plant interactions are beginning to be understood. Recent advances include the identification of aphid salivary proteins involved in host plant manipulation, and plant receptors involved in aphid recognition. However, a complete picture of aphid-plant interactions requires consideration of the ecological outcome of these mechanisms in nature, and the evolutionary processes that shaped them. Here we identify general patterns of resistance, with a special focus on recognition, phytohormonal signalling, secondary metabolites and induction of plant resistance. We discuss how host specialization can enable aphids to co-opt both the phytohormonal responses and defensive compounds of plants for their own benefit at a local scale. In response, systemically induced resistance in plants is common and often involves targeted responses to specific aphid species or even genotypes. As co-evolutionary adaptation between plants and aphids is ongoing, the stealthy nature of aphid feeding makes both the mechanisms and outcomes of these interactions highly distinct from those of other herbivore-plant interactions.

256 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: CYP81F2 contributes to defense against the green peach aphid but not to resistance against herbivory by larvae from four lepidopteran species, and the IGM1 QTL is largely caused by differences in CYP81F1 expression.
Abstract: Glucosinolates are defensive secondary compounds that display large structural diversity in Arabidopsis thaliana and related plants. Much attention has been paid to variation in the biosynthesis of Met-derived aliphatic glucosinolates and its ecological consequences, but little is known about the genes that cause qualitative and quantitative differences in Trp-derived indole glucosinolates. We use a combination of quantitative trait locus (QTL) fine-mapping and microarray-based transcript profiling to identify CYP81F2 (At5g57220), encoding a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase, as the gene underlying Indole Glucosinolate Modifier1 (IGM1), a metabolic QTL for the accumulation of two modified indole glucosinolates, 4-hydroxy-indole-3-yl-methyl and 4-methoxy-indole-3-yl-methyl glucosinolate. We verify CYP81F2 function with two SALK T-DNA insertion lines and show that CYP81F2 catalyzes the conversion of indole-3-yl-methyl to 4-hydroxy-indole-3-yl-methyl glucosinolate. We further show that the IGM1 QTL is largely caused by differences in CYP81F2 expression, which results from a combination of cis- and trans-acting expression QTL different from known regulators of indole glucosinolate biosynthesis. Finally, we elucidate a potential function of CYP81F2 in plant-insect interactions and find that CYP81F2 contributes to defense against the green peach aphid (Myzus persicae) but not to resistance against herbivory by larvae from four lepidopteran species.

193 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The presence of endosymbiotic bacteria conferring resistance to parasitoids, and aphids feeding on toxic plants, and evidence for the toxic plant hypothesis was found for the milkweed aphids Aphis asclepiadis and Aphis nerii highlight the multifaceted nature of factors determining host specificity in Parasitoids.
Abstract: The host specificity of insect parasitoids and herbivores is thought to be shaped by a suite of traits that mediate host acceptance and host suitability. We conducted laboratory experiments to identify mechanisms shaping the host specificity of the aphid parasitoid Binodoxys communis. Twenty species of aphids were exposed to B. communis females in microcosms, and detailed observations and rearing studies of 15 of these species were done to determine whether patterns of host use resulted from variation in factors such as host acceptance or variation in host suitability. Six species of aphids exposed to B. communis showed no signs of parasitism. Four of these species were not recognized as hosts and two effectively defended themselves from attack by B. communis. Other aphid species into which parasitoids laid eggs had low suitability as hosts. Parasitoid mortality occurred in the egg or early larval stages for some of these hosts but for others it occurred in late larval stages. Two hypotheses explaining low suitability were investigated in separate experiments: the presence of endosymbiotic bacteria conferring resistance to parasitoids, and aphids feeding on toxic plants. An association between resistance and endosymbiont infection was found in one species (Aphis craccivora), and evidence for the toxic plant hypothesis was found for the milkweed aphids Aphis asclepiadis and Aphis nerii. This research highlights the multifaceted nature of factors determining host specificity in parasitoids.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results revealed that temperature strongly affected resistance, while UV-B did not, and the prevalence of dual symbiosis involving PAXS and H. defensa in local aphid populations suggests its importance in protecting aphid immunity to parasitism under abiotic stress.

174 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
26 Mar 2010-Science
TL;DR: Interspecific variation in the strength of top-down control in terms of a tradeoff with growth was observed and contemporary patterns of trophic control are driven by evolutionary convergent trade-offs faced by plants.
Abstract: Predators determine herbivore and plant biomass via so-called trophic cascades, and the strength of such effects is influenced by ecosystem productivity. To determine whether evolutionary trade-offs among plant traits influence patterns of trophic control, we manipulated predators and soil fertility and measured impacts of a major herbivore (the aphid Aphis nerii) on 16 milkweed species (Asclepias spp.) in a phylogenetic field experiment. Herbivore density was determined by variation in predation and trade-offs between herbivore resistance and plant growth strategy. Neither herbivore density nor predator effects on herbivores predicted the cascading effects of predators on plant biomass. Instead, cascade strength was strongly and positively associated with milkweed response to soil fertility. Accordingly, contemporary patterns of trophic control are driven by evolutionary convergent trade-offs faced by plants.

127 citations