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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Sucrose Concentration on Diet Uptake and Performance by the Pea Aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum

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TLDR
It is suggested that the better performance of A. pisum on diets containing 35% sucrose was caused by some contaminant present in sucrose and essential for aphid growth and reproduction, which was provided in near optimum amounts only when the sucrose concentration was at 35%, and was not necessarily a result of high concentration of sucrose itself.
Abstract
Sucrose at a concentration of 10% and above in a chemical diet was phagostimulatory to 1st-stage nymphs of the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum (Harris) (Homoptera: Aphididae). The total amount of sucrose ingested during the 1st 24 hours (hr) increased with the rise from 5 to 50% sucrose concentration in the diet, but diet uptake in microliters per aphid was highest when sucrose concentration was 10–25%. Nymphs gained more weight during the 1st 24 hr on diets containing 20–25% sucrose than on those containing lower or higher concentrations of sucrose. Similar results on weight gains were observed after 48 hr, but after 72 hr, the highest weight gain was observed on diets containing 35% sucrose. Aphids on 0–30% sucrose diets did not become adults whereas those on 35% sucrose diets were reared continuously for several generations. Generally similar results were obtained when 1st-stage nymphs were fed on a 30% sucrose diet for 20 hr prior to their transfer to diets containing different concentrations of sucrose, with the main difference that such nymphs ingested relatively larger amounts of the sucrosefree diet. However, after 24 hr of feeding, aphids lost weight on the 0 and 5% sucrose diets, suggesting that at least 10% sucrose was necessary for normal absorption. Aphids reproduced mainly on the 10, 15, and 35% sucrose diets, and the highest number of progeny was produced on the latter diet, where aphids were reared for several generations. It is suggested that the better performance of A. pisum on diets containing 35% sucrose was caused by some contaminant (possibly a heavy metal) present in sucrose and essential for aphid growth and reproduction, which was provided in near optimum amounts only when the sucrose concentration was at 35%, and was not necessarily a result of high concentration of sucrose itself.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant penetration by feeding aphids (Hemiptera, Aphidoidea): a review

TL;DR: The factors responsible for determining the host-plants and feeding sites of aphids, and the various probing activities (the role of the labium, stylet insertion, surface saliva deposition, the behaviour of the aphid, virus transmission) are examined.
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Regulatory Mechanisms in Insect Feeding

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the way the performance of these may vary according to the insect's state of deprivation, and the number of behavioral components involved in the total feeding behavior of an insect depends upon its temporal and spatial relationships with its food.
Book ChapterDOI

An ingestion-egestion hypothesis of noncirculative virus transmission

TL;DR: In this article, the ingestion-egestion hypothesis non-circulative virus transmission is discussed, and two classification systems have been used to describe virus transmissions by aphids and leafhoppers: one is based on how long vectors retain virus, and the other on where and how virus is carried by the vector.
Journal ArticleDOI

Provision of riboflavin to the host aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, by endosymbiotic bacteria, Buchnera

TL;DR: The results strongly suggest that young, symbiotic aphids are provided with riboflavin by their endosymbionts, Buchnera.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth and reproduction of the symbiotic and aposymbiotic pea aphids, Acyrthosiphon pisum maintained on artificial diets

TL;DR: The capability of amino acid conversion of the aphid was investigated and the following amino acids were found labelled exclusively in the symbiotic aphids: arginine, histidine, isoleucine and/or leucine, lysine, phenylalanine, threonine and valine, suggesting that-these so-called essential amino acid were produced with the aid of symbionts.
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