bactrocera tryoni (frogatt) (diptera: tephritidae):...

223
Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): from individuals to populations W. Sakuntala Nayanatara Muthuthantri, B.Sc. (Agriculture), M.Phil. Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for a Doctor of Philosophy School of Earth, Environmental and Biological Sciences Queensland University of Technology Brisbane, Australia 2013

Upload: hoangkiet

Post on 20-May-2018

227 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae):

from individuals to populations

W. Sakuntala Nayanatara Muthuthantri, B.Sc. (Agriculture), M.Phil.

Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for a Doctor of Philosophy

School of Earth, Environmental and Biological Sciences

Queensland University of Technology

Brisbane, Australia

2013

Page 2: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni
Page 3: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

i

Key words

Citrus, oviposition preference, larval survival, citrus peel chemicals, citrus peel

structure, host quality, DYMEX, population dynamics, Dacini

Page 4: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

ii

Abstract

Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni, is a multivoltine pest species that is

distributed throughout large parts of eastern Australia. The adult female lays eggs

into ripening fruits, where the emergent larvae feed before emerging to pupate in

soil. Bactrocera tryoni is a polyphagous species and has been breed from 117

species of native and commercially produced fruits and fleshy vegetables. While

temperature and rainfall are thought to regulate B. tryoni populations in temperate

Australia, the presence of suitable larval hosts has been postulated as being a key

population drivers in subtropical and tropical parts of its distribution. However, such

assumptions have not been tested and the role of host quality on B. tryoni oviposition

and larval survival, and the impact that has on the abundance and phenology of fly

populations has not been well studied. This thesis examines the impact of B. tryoni

host use at multiple scales from individuals through to populations. The work is

done with a focus on commercial fruits of the genus Citrus and has applied

implications for fruit fly area-wide management and resistance breeding.

Bactrocera tryoni oviposition preference and offspring performance was investigated

among five citrus types, Murcott mandarin, Navel orange, Eureka lemon, Valencia

orange and yellow grapefruit, under laboratory choice and no-choice conditions. An

oviposition preference hierarchy was exhibited by ovipositing females among the

citrus types, with Murcott mandarin and grapefruit highly preferred. The overall rate

of F1 adult production was poor among all citrus types with Murcott mandarin, at

~20% egg to adult survival, a substantially better host than the other four citrus types

(0-6%). In contrast, egg to adult survival in non-citrus hosts such as nectarine,

loquat and mulberry were around 60-80%.

Further studies were performed to determine the mechanisms acting to limit survival

to the adult stage in citrus varieties. Existing literature reporting the suitability of

citrus as a host for other tephritid species suggest that, fruit peel properties play an

important role in oviposition and survival of the immature life stages. Consequently,

I focused on the role of citrus morphological and chemical properties on survival of

B. tryoni to the adult stage. Using the same five citrus types as in the previous study,

peel toughness, thickness (including the zest [flavedo] and pith [albedo] layers), oil

gland size and density, and depth of oviposition were measured using stereo and

Page 5: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

iii

light microscopy. With the exception of oil gland size, all morphological

measurements, including oviposition depth, differed significantly among the five

citrus types. The deepest oviposition depth, with eggs laid in the oil, less albedo

layer were found in mandarin, while for the four citrus types oviposition depth was

shallower and eggs were deposited into the oil rich flavedo layer. Of physical

properties tested, peel toughness and oil gland density showed significant negative

correlations with ovipositor depth.

It has been demonstrated in other studies that different layers of the citrus peel have

different chemical compositions. Having found that eggs laid by females in the

flavedo, which is rich in oils and lipid-soluble volatile compounds, my next aim was

to investigate the direct effects of a selections of these compounds on B. tryoni

offspring survival. Peel essential oils were extracted from each of the five citrus

types used in earlier experiments, and along with six individual essential oil

components common across Citrus, dose-dependent larval feeding bioassay

experiments were conducted. Navel orange, lemon and grapefruit essential oils had

significant negative effect on B. tryoni egg/larval survival, while the oils of Murcott

mandarin and Valencia orange did not significantly affect larvae. Of the six

individual oil fractions tested, only D- limonene showed a significant negative effect

on B. tryoni larvae – but this was very dramatic, with tiny concentrations of the

chemical in diet causing 100% larval mortality.

While B. tryoni citrus host use was examined under laboratory conditions, I also

investigated host use behaviour under field conditions to ensure conclusions reached

from laboratory data were transferable to the field. Using Ellendale mandarins,

Valencia orange, Eureka lemon and nectarines, I assessed B. tryoni clutch size and

offspring emergence from both bagged (after oviposition) and unbagged fruit. B.

tryoni clutch size was significantly different among the fruit types, with lemon

receiving the largest egg clutches. Fly emergence from the citrus was very low, at

levels comparable to the laboratory studies, while fly production from nectarine was

very high.

Host effects on the population dynamics of B. tryoni were investigated by modifying

an existing, mechanistic B. tryoni population model to allow the incorporation of

host quality and abundance parameters. The sensitivity of the model to a host-

Page 6: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

iv

related larval mortality parameter was tested and found to be significant. The

dynamics of B. tryoni populations under different hypothetical arrangements of

changing host abundance were then tested. In these scenarios, host quality was

found to be a more important parameter than host abundance for population growth

and survival.

This study concludes that B. tryoni shows a preference hierarchy among citrus and

that citrus fruits, in general, are poor hosts for B. tryoni. It further concludes that the

quality of available hosts plays a major role on the dynamics of B. tryoni populations

in subtropical and tropical systems.

Page 7: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

v

Table of Contents

Keywords i

Abstract ii

Table of contents v

List of figures xi

List of tables xviii

Declaration xx

Acknowledgements

xxi

Chapter 1: General Introduction 1

1.1 Introduction 1

1.1.1 Phytophagous insect host use behaviour 2

1.2. Tephritid host acceptance 4

1.2.1 Exogenous factors influencing fruit fly host acceptance 5

1.2.1.1 Host physical properties 5

1.2.1.2 Fruit Odour 11

1.2.1.3 Non-volatile host chemicals 11

1.2.1.4 Influence of insect produced chemicals 12

1.2.2 Other exogenous factors influencing host acceptance by

fruit flies

13

1.2.2.1 Conspecific flies 13

1.2.2.2 Abiotic environmental factors 15

1.2.3 Endogenous factors influencing fruit fly host acceptance 15

1.2.3.1 Experience 15

1.2.3.2 Egg load 16

1.2.3.3 Insect nutritional status 17

1.3 Clutch size 17

1.3.1 Effect of host variables on Tephritid clutch size 18

Page 8: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

vi

1.3.1.1 Fruit availability 18

1.3.1.2. Fruit physical properties 18

1.4 Offspring performance 19

1.4.1 Fruit genotype 19

1.4.2 Fruit ripeness 20

1.4.3 Presence of non dietary (secondary) compounds in host 20

1.4.4 Presence of nutritional compounds in host 21

1.4.5 Fruit physical attributes 21

1.5 Host use and populations of tropical Tephritids 22

1.5.1 Fruit phenology 22

1.5.2 Local host plant composition 23

1.6 Scope and structure of thesis

23

Chapter 2 :Oviposition preference and offspring performance of Bactrocera tryoni among citrus types

27

2.1 Introduction 28

2.2 Methods 30

2.2.1 Flies and fruit 30

2.2.2 Choice and no-choice oviposition tests 31

2.2.3 Clutch size evaluation 32

2.2.4 Immature performance of B. tryoni in citrus 33

2.2.5 Fecundity of B. tryoni reared from citrus 34

2.2.6 Assessment of fruit characteristics 34

2.3 Results 35

2.3.1 Oviposition choice tests 35

2.3.2 Oviposition no-choice tests 37

2.3.3 Fruit characteristics 40

2.3.4 Immature performance 40

2.3.5 Fecundity of B. tryoni reared from citrus 41

2.4 Discussion

43

Chapter 3: Effect of citrus peel physical properties on Bactrocera tryoni oviposition behaviour

47

Page 9: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

vii

3.1 Introduction 48

3.2 Methods 51

3.2.1 Fruit material 51

3.2.2 Tissue preparation for digital stereo microscopy 52

3.2.3 Tissue preparation for light microscopy 55

3.2.4 Data from light microscopy 57

3.3 Results 58

3.3.1 Physical peel properties 58

3.3.2 Location of B. tryoni eggs in the citrus peel 64

3.4 Discussion

70

Chapter 4 :Effect of citrus peel volatiles on Bactrocera tryoni larval survival

73

4.1 Introduction 74

4.2. Methods 77

4.2.1 Citrus essential oil extraction 77

4.2.1.1 Peel preparation 77

4.2.1.2 Oil extraction 77

4.2.1.3 Chromatographic analysis 78

4.2.2 Citrus oil feeding assay 79

4.2.2.1 Larval diet 79

4.2.2.2 Oil concentrations used in feeding bioassays 79

4.2.2.3 Insects 81

4.2.2.4 Preliminary experiments 82

4.2.2.5 Main feeding bioassays 82

4.2.3 Citrus oil fraction feeding assay 83

4.3 Results 85

4.3.1 Citrus essential oil yield and composition 85

4.3.2 Essential oil feeding assay 88

4.3.3. Citrus essential oil fraction feeding assay 90

4.4 Discussion

93

Chapter 5: Bactrocera tryoni oviposition and offspring performance in 97

Page 10: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

viii

field unpicked citrus fruits

5. 1 Introduction 98

5.2 Methods 99

5.2.1 Study Site 99

5.2.2 Flies 99

5.2.3 Fruit infestation by laboratory reared B. tryoni flies 100

5.2.4 Fruit infestation by wild B. tryoni flies 101

5.2.5 Life table analysis 103

5.2.6 Other data analysis 104

5.3 Results 104

5.3.1 Fruits infested by laboratory reared B. tryoni 104

5.3.1.1 Clutch size 104

5.3.1.2 Adult emergence 105

5.3.2 Field infestation rates by wild B. tryoni 106

5.3.3 Field infestation of B. tryoni in citrus and non-citrus fruits

in Mundubbera

107

5.3.4 Life table analysis 108

5.4 Discussion

111

Chapter 6 :Effect of larval host quality on Bactrocera tryoni population dynamics

114

6.1 Introduction 115

6.2 Methods 118

6.2.1 General approach 118

6.2.2. DYMEX modelling 118

6.2.2.1 Original B. tryoni DYMEX model (Yonow et al. 2004) 119

6.2.2.2 B. tryoni DYMEX model incorporating fruit number

(Muthuthantri, 2008)

120

6.2.2.3 Incorporating fruit quality related mortality into a B.

tryoni model

120

6.2.3 Sensitivity analysis 126

6.2.3.1 Data files 126

6.2.3.2 Model sensitivity analysis 127

Page 11: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

ix

6.2.4 Hypothetical host utilization scenarios developed for

Mundubbera

128

6.2.4.1 Meteorological data 128

6.2.4.2 Fruit data for different host utilization scenarios 128

6.2.4.3 Hypothetical host utilization scenarios developed for

Mundubbera

130

6.3 Results 131

6.3.1 Sensitivity analysis 131

6.3.1.1 Mean reproductive female number with respect to Lhq 132

6.3.2 B. tryoni host utilization scenarios 135

6.4 Discussion

139

Chapter 7 : General Discussion 142

7.1 Thesis summary 142

7.2 Research implications 144

7.2.1 Resistance breeding for fruit flies 144

7.2.2 Host status and fly control 147

7.2.3 Bactrocera tryoni and the preference/performance

relationship in herbivorous insects

148

7.3 Further research 151

7.3.1 B. tryoni citrus host use behaviour in exotic vs. native

citrus species

151

7.3.2 Citrus peel chemical effects on B. tryoni larval survival 152

7.3.3 Improving B. tryoni population dynamics model to capture

different hosts in the same model

152

7.4 Conclusions 153

References 154

Appendices 188

Appendix 1 The reproductive female cohort selected for one way ANOVA

among different Lhq in the sensitivity analysis

188

Appendix 2 Preliminary trial: Host quality of non-citrus fruits 189

Page 12: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

x

Appendix 3 Location specific fruit phenology data created for five

scenarios (CD)

191

Page 13: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xi

List of Figures Page

Figure 2.1: Five citrus types used for oviposition preference and

offspring performance study.

31

Figure 2.2: Observation cages with hanging citrus fruits for choice and

no choice experiments inside the laboratory. Plastic trays

are water trays for the flies. (A) Fruits hung for choice

experiment (B) Fruit hung for no choice experiment.

32

Figure 2.3: Different mean (±SE) measures of Bactrocera tryoni

ovipositional response to five different citrus types offered

in either a three-way (a, c, e) or two-way (b, d, f) choice test.

The behavioural responses recorded are: (a, b) time in

minutes between fly release and first visit a fruit; (c, d)

number of oviposition events; and (e, f) number of eggs laid.

The different fruit types are split into the two groups based

on their shared fruiting season in the field. Figures a, c, e; n

= 16 replicates of the combined response of six female flies

simultaneously offered one piece of each of three fruit types.

Figures b, d, f; n = 19 replicates of the combined response of

six female flies simultaneously offered one piece of each of

two fruit types.

36

Figure 2.4: Different mean (±SE) measures of Bactrocera tryoni

ovipositional response to five citrus fruit types when offered

under no-choice conditions: (a) time in minutes between fly

release and first visit to the fruit; (b) number of oviposition

events; (c) number of eggs laid and (d) clutch size (lemon

was not included in the graph as not enough oviposition

occurred in the experiment). N = nine replicates per fruit

type, each replicate consisting of the combined response of

38

Page 14: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xii

six female flies simultaneously offered one piece of fruit.

Figure 2.5: Mean (±SE) (a) fruit diameter, (b) peel toughness and (c)

sugar content of five, ripe citrus fruits. N (Murcott) = 10, n

(Navel) = 14, n (lemon) = 18, n (Valencia) = 54, n

(grapefruit) = 56).

39

Figure 2.6: Mean (±SE) number of Bactrocera tryoni pupae recovered

from different citrus fruits following natural infestation. N=

9 single fruit replicates for Murcott, Navel and grapefruit, 10

single fruit replicates for Valencia and 15 single fruit

replicates for lemon. Estimated starting number of eggs for

each single fruit

41

Figure 3.1: Diagrammatic cross section of the peel and pulp of a

‘typical’ citrus fruit. From the outside in the layers are: (C)

cuticle; (P) parenchyma cells; (F) flavedo; (A) albedo, (O)

oil gland and (Ca) carpel or pulp.

.

49

Figure 3.2: Digital stereo microscopic image of citrus peel tissue

showing the measurements made for (F) flavedo thickness

and (A) albedo thickness.

53

Figure 3.3: Digital stereo microscopic image of citrus peel tissue

following ovipoistion by Bactrocera tryoni showing the

oviposition depth (OD) and the egg chamber with eggs

(EC). [NB: the contrast and brightness of this image have

been modified for illustrative purposes].

55

Figure 3.4: Mean (±SE) thickness of the (a) peel flavedo, (b) peel

albedo and (c) total peel (cuticle + flavedo + albedo) of five

citrus types.

60

Page 15: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xiii

Figure 3.5: Mean (±SE) (a) oil gland size, (b) distance between

neighbouring oil glands and (c) oil gland density in the peel

of five citrus types.

61

Figure 3.6: Light micrograph of oil glands in the peel of five citrus

types. Aldehyde fixed longitudinal, Toluiodine stained

sections (15µm). (O). Oil gland, (O.I) Immature oil gland,

(C) Cuticle. Bar represent 1000µm.

62-64

Figure 3.7: Relationship between peel toughness and oil gland density

of citrus with ovipositor depth (a) peel oil gland density vs.

ovipositor depth (b) peel toughness vs.

66

Figure 3.8: Bactrocera tryoni oviposition into five citrus types

illustrating (a) mean (±SE) oviposition depth, (b) egg

chamber height and (c) relationship between oviposition

depth and thickness of the flavedo layer. In (c) a positive

measurement means eggs are laid into the flavedo layer, a

negative measurement (i.e. for Murcott) means eggs bypass

the flavedo and are laid into the albedo layer.

67

Figure 3.9: Longitudinal sections of stereo digital micrograph (SD) and

aldehyde fixed longitudinal, tolu iodine stained sections

(15µm) of light micrograph (LM) of B. tryoni oviposited

peel sections of five citrus types. (O) oil gland, (C ) cuticle,

(F) Flavedo, (A) Albedo, (EC) Egg chamber.

69

Figure 4.1: Small peel pieces of citrus peel prepared for essential oil

extraction.

77

Figure 4.2: Clevenger apparatus set up for citrus peel oil extraction.

Citrus peel was filled in the round bottom flasks.

78

Figure 4.3: Mean (±SE) essential oil yield from the peel of five citrus 86

Page 16: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xiv

types. Columns surmounted by the same letter are no

significantly different at α = 0.05.

Figure 4.4: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni egg to second instar larval

survival in diets modified by the addition of peel essential

oil extracts of five citrus types. Maximum survival = 10, n =

3 replicates for each treatment.

88

Figure 4.5: Survival of Bactrocera tryoni from egg to late second instar

feeding on an artificial larval diet containing increasing

concentrations of citrus peel oil from (a) Murcott mandarin,

(b) Navel orange (c) Eureka lemon, (d) Valencia orange and

(e) yellow grapefruit.

89

Figure 4.6: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni egg to second instar larval

survival in diet modified by the additional of citrus peel

essential oil fractions. Maximum survival = 10, n = 3

replicates for each treatment.

91

Figure 4.7: Bactrocera tryoni survival from egg to late second instar

feeding on artificial larval diet containing increasing

concentrations of the citrus peel oil fractions (a) α-pinene

(b) β-pinene (c) ᵞ-terpinene (d) P-cymene (e) myrcene (f) D-

limonene.

92

Figure 5.1: The Boreen Point field site where Bactrocera tryoni host

utilization was studied on Ellendale mandarin, Valencia

orange and Eureka lemon.

99

Figure 5.2: Illustrations of various stages of field experiments for

Bactrocera tryoni citrus host use. (A) Adult B. tryoni

examining the fruit attached to the tree inside the cloth mesh

cage. (B) Citrus fruits enclosed with cloth mesh and paper

102

Page 17: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xv

cages. (C) Inverted funnel traps, under which one infested

fruit was placed, for capturing emergent adult flies.

Figure 5.3: Estimated mean (±SE) egg clutch size of laboratory reared

B. tryoni laying into four fruit types hanging on trees.

105

Figure 5.4: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni adult fly emergence from

four fruit types infested on the tree and left for 11-13 days

before being harvested and returned to the laboratory for

pupal recovery.

106

Figure 5.5: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni emergence from field fruits

potentially infested by wild fly populations.

107

Figure 5.6: Figure 5.6. Standardised survivorship curves of Bactrocera

tryoni from four fruit types infested on the tree and left for

11-13 days before being harvested and returned to the

laboratory for pupal recovery and adult emergence. Age (X)

‘0’ is a combined egg/larval stage, age (X) ‘1’ is the pupal

stage and age (X) ‘2’ teneral adults stage.

110

Figure 6.1: Life cycle diagram and the factors influencing life stages as

developed in the Bactrocera tryoni population model used in

this thesis, and developed originally from the model

provided by Yonow et al. (2004).

121

Figure 6.2: Penology of different fruit fly host fruits in Mundubbera SE

QLD.

129

Figure 6.3: Predicted population phenology of Bactrocera tryoni using a

modified DYMEX model initially presented by Yonow et al.

(2004). Each figure part consists of two panels, where the

upper panel is the predicted larval number, and the lower

panel the predicted number of reproductive females. Each

134

Page 18: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xvi

figure part varies only from the others in the model

parameter Lhq (= larval mortality due to host quality).

Increasing Lhq represents hosts of decreasing suitability for

B. tryoni off-spring survival. The Lhq values are (A) Lhq =

0.1, (B) Lhq = 0.15, (C) Lhq = 0.20, (D) Lhq = 0.25, (E) Lhq

= 0.30, (F) Lhq = 0.35, (G) Lhq = 0.40. Note that for each

figure part, while the x-axis is constant, the y-axis is

variable.

Figure 6.4: Predicted daily mean (±SE) number of Bactrocera tryoni

reproductive females produced from days 30-59 inclusive of

a modified DYMEX B. tryoni population model initially

presented by Yonow et al. (2004). Each column is the

output of a different model run, where the only difference

between the runs was the Lhq (= larval mortality due to host

quality) value. Increasing Lhq represents hosts of decreasing

suitability for B. tryoni off-spring survival.

135

Figure 6.5: Predicted population phenologies of Bactrocera tryoni using

a modified DYMEX model initially presented by Yonow et

al. (2004). Each figure part consists of two panels, where

the upper panel is the predicted number of reproductive

females, and the lower panel the abundance of host fruit.

Each figure part varies from the others in the abundance of

host fruit (figure parts A &B the same, differ from part C),

or the model parameter Lhq (= larval mortality due to host

quality). Increasing Lhq represents hosts of decreasing

suitability for B. tryoni off-spring survival. The Lhq values

are (A) Lhq = 0.32, (B) Lhq = 0.08, (C) Lhq = 0.004. Note

that for each figure part, while the x-axis is constant, the y-

137

Page 19: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xvii

axis is variable.

Page 20: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xviii

List of Tables Table 2.1: Summary of Bactrocera tryoni off-spring performance in five

different citrus fruits.

42

Table 3.1: Number of Citrus peel replicates made in the current study.

“Infested” means exposed oviposited into by Bactrocera tryoni.

53

Table 3.2: Tissue preparation steps for citrus peel sections slide mounted

for light microscopy.

56

Table 4.1: Oil fraction from different citrus types

75

Table 4.2: The volumes of citrus peel essential oil of five citrus types used

per 3g of carrot diet in Bactrocera tryoni larval feeding

bioassays.

81

Table 4.3: The volumes of citrus peel essential oil fractions used per 3g of

carrot diet in Bactrocera tryoni larval feeding assays.

84

Table 4.4: Yield and composition of peel essential oil from five citrus fruit

types.

87

Table 4.5: Estimated essential oil concentration required to cause 50% and

90% Bactrocera tryoni egg and larval mortality by the end of

the second instar.

90

Table 5.1: Bactrocera tryoni fly production in the field infested citrus fruit

types in Mundubbera and Gayndah.

108

Table 5.2: Age based population parameters of Bactrocera tryoni reared

from different fruit types.

109

Page 21: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xix

Table 6.1: Individual modules of the DYMEX Bactrocera tryoni

population model developed initially by Yonow et al. (2004)

122

Table 6.2 Detailed components of the life cycle module of the DYMEX

Bactrocera tryoni population model developed by Yonow et al.

(2004) and subsequently modified in this thesis.

123

Page 22: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xx

Declaration

The work contained in this thesis has not been previously submitted to meet

requirements for an award at this or any other higher education institution. To the

best of my knowledge and belief, the thesis contains no material previously

published or written by another person except where due reference is made.

Signature

Date

Page 23: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xxi

Acknowledgement

First and foremost I would like to admit my heartfelt gratitude to my principle

supervisor A/Prof. Anthony (Tony) Clarke for the endless encouragement to

perceive my PhD to attain this successful end. Not only guiding me to go in the

right direction in my research but, the enormous confident built up in myself when I

was in tough time during this study.

I thankful to Dr. Soloman Balagawi who helped me by sharing his laboratory

experience with flies as well as many other areas in my study.

I deeply pay my gratitude to my mother and father who raised me who I am today

from the day I born to this date. They are the reason for me to completion of my

PhD, as I had to overcome so many difficulties to drag my study to this end.

Especially I grateful to my mother who helped me a lot by looking after house work

and take caring my children when I was doing the final write up.

I thankful to my husband for being beside me for the all trough and booms in my

PhD which was not easy task when I am working long hours and sometime being in

an “alien world” but not with him or my family. He is the main criticizer of my

research work as well as who listen to the all sorrows and happy moments in this

journey.

There are many other people who gave me priceless support in this journey. All

DEEDI (Brisbane ) staff, specially Thelma , MaryAnn, Brendan Hyun and Kevin.

Thank you for the generous support you gave me without hesitation when I was

doing my laboratory trials in DEEDI laboratory. I express my gratitude to Kevin,

Melody for the support they gave me for time consuming laboratory trials and field

trials when I needed help in helpless moment in my life. Special thanks go to Dr.

Tanya Scharaschkin for introducing and supporting plant histology for my study.

Special thanks goes to Dr. Andrew Hays for generous support given me for the peel

oil extraction work done in his laboratory.

I thankful to the EEB staff for the friendly support during my study. Especial thanks

go to Amy Carmichael for helping in various ways including academic as well as

Page 24: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

xxii

personal kind. Also, I thankful to all my colleagues, Kumar, Emma, Mark for their

support in different time of this journey.

I greatly appreciate for the financial and study support given me from the CRC

National plant Biosecurity and the tuition fee waiver given from QUT.

Page 25: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

1

CHAPTER 1

General Introduction

1.1 INTRODUCTION

True fruit flies are insects belonging to the dipteran family Tephritidae, which

contains many of the most economically important fruit pests in the world (Clarke et

al., 2011a; Fletcher, 1987; Robinson & Hooper, 1989). Within the Tephritidae, more

than 1000 species are placed within the subfamily Dacinae and nearly all of these are

fruit feeding species (Diaz-Fleischer et al., 2001). For dacine fruit flies, fruits are

central to their life history as they represent an essential external resource required

for the completion of the life cycle (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Fletcher, 1987). In

general all fruit fly species1 have similar life cycles in which reproductive females

lay mature eggs into fruit, where the emergent larvae feed before emerging to pupate

in the soil. Larvae pass through three larval stages as they develop inside the fruit,

feeding upon fruit flesh and microorganisms associated with the decay of fruit

tissues (Fletcher, 1987; May, 1963). Larvae are restricted to a single fruit piece and,

because of this, oviposition by the parental fly is critical for the subsequent survival

and fitness of her offspring (Fitt, 1986). Because reproduction can only occur in

fruit the availability of fruiting host plants is not only essential to individual

reproduction, but fruit also becomes a central driver of fruit fly population dynamics

(Drew et al., 1984; May, 1963; Muthuthantri et al.; 2008, Pritchard, 1969).

Despite the well-known relationships between many fruit flies and their host fruit,

particularly for the fly species of economic importance (Carey 1985; Clarke A.R.

2005; Dhillon et al., 2005), this is not the case for Australia’s major pestilent fruit

fly, Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt). In temperate parts of its Australian distribution, B.

tryoni populations are considered to be primarily regulated by climatic factors,

especially temperature and humidity (Bateman, 1968; Fletcher, 1975, 1979; Yonow

et al., 2004). However, Muthuthantri et al. (2010) found that a B. tryoni population

model driven largely by abiotic climate factors did not work for the subtropical and

tropical parts of the fly’s range: rather it was speculated that host availability played

the dominant role in B. tryoni population dynamics. Despite the fact that fruit is

1 While recognising the diversity of feeding habits of different sub-families within the Tephritidae, when ‘fruit fly’ is referred to in this thesis it refers to frugivorous tephritids, unless otherwise explicitly stated.

Page 26: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

2

known to play a central role in the individual life cycles and population dynamics of

B. tryoni (Drew et al., 1984), and despite it’s fly’s major economic importance

(Lloyd et al. 2010; Clarke, 2011a), published literature on the host use patterns of

this species are largely lacking (Clarke et al., 2011a).

Citrus species and varieties are one group of important B. tryoni hosts (Hancock et

al., 2000),which are widely grown in Australia at commercial and non-commercial

level. Bactrocera tryoni attack and infestation are considered major limiters to the

commercially viable production of citrus and seriously impede domestic and

international market access (Lloyd et al., 2010). Despite the importance of B. tryoni

to the Australian citrus crop, there are no detailed studies of citrus host use by this

fly. As a component of strategic research towards the long term management of B.

tryoni, both in citrus and other crops, this thesis investigates host utilisation of citrus

by the fly. The thesis studies both the patterns and mechanisms of adult oviposition

preference and offspring performance in a range of citrus types. Detailed work on

individual insects is then carried through to the population level, by incorporating

host quality as a biotic variable in a B. tryoni deterministic population model. The

thesis thus looks at host use in B. tryoni from the very fine mechanistic level,

through to its impact on population level dynamics.

Following this brief introduction, the remainder of this chapter consists of a formal

literature review. The literature review covers host use by tephritids under three

main themes. The first of these is adult oviposition preference, under which both

host related (i.e. extrinsic) and insect related (i.e. intrinsic) factors affecting on

tephritid oviposition preference/acceptance and clutch size are reviewed. The

second theme reviewed is tephritid offspring performance and the factors affecting

egg and larva survival. Finally, the influence of host related factors on tephritid

population dynamics in the field are reviewed. Following from the review, this

chapter concludes with section outlining the thesis aims, scope and structure.

1.1.1 Phytophagous insect host use behaviour

In the process of host plant selection and feeding by phytophagous insects, plant

chemical and physical features act as stimulant or repellent agents (Endo et al., 2004;

Hori et al., 2011; Pontes et al., 2010; Renwick, 2001). Some physical feature like

spines, hair and toughness of the plant tissue are generally considered as less

Page 27: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

3

preferred features for plant feeding insects which reduce the insect host acceptability

(Dethier, 1941; Pontes et al., 2010; Thorsteinson, 1960; Zalucki et al., 2001).

Chemicals, especially the host secondary chemicals, nutrients are the other major

factor that effect on the host plant selection and feeding of phytophagous insects

(Bernays & Chapman, 1994; Bierbaum, 1990; Renwick, 2001). The host secondary

chemicals are not nutritionally important to plant or insects but they are acting as a

repellent or attractant for the insects. These plant chemicals can be recognised by

the insect from distance or sometime when they touch the plant surface (e.g. insect

may feel the waxy layer of the plant surface) or sometime when they start to feed on

the plant (Renwick, 1989; Renwick, 2001; Thorsteinson, 1960). Thus host use

decision of insect also can change when they land on the host plant and touch the

surface of it. If insect still accept the host plant it may start to feed or lay eggs in the

host plant. These host plant stimulant/messages are necessary to be encoded by the

host selector to make decision whether to use the host or not (Renwick, 2001).

However, the plant selector not always the direct host plant feeder of the lifecycle of

phytophagous insects. In the life cycle of the phytophagous insects, plant feeder can

be the host selector,(e.g. grasshopper (Order : Orthoptera) lady beetle (Order:

Coleoptera))(Chapman, 2009; Hori et al., 2011) or, in some cases plant selector are

two life stages of the lifecycle. For example, in many Hemiptera and Lepidoptera

species, host selector is the adult stage while plant feeder is immature stages. Thus

host plant feeding and their development and survival are highly influenced by the

parental host selection behaviour while compared to the event that host selector and

feeder are same life stage where they recognise the host suitability (Endo et al.,

2004; Hori et al., 2011; Thorsteinson, 1960).

Primary host selector not directly utilize the host

When host selector are the parent insect and actual host utilizer is the immature life

stage, adult fly preference for certain host force the immature stages to utilize the

adult insect accepted host. If adult insect is not adapted to select suitable host and

ensure normal development of its immature stages, these immature stages may not

achieve optimal development by feeding the adult selected host plant (Mayhew,

1997; Nylin, 1996; Thompson, 1988). Moreover, immature stages of many insects

have limited ability to discriminate hosts (e.g. Lepidoptera larvae) (Renwick, 2001).

Page 28: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

4

Similarly the range of host plant species that immature stages could develop was not

the preferred host to oviposit by the adult insect (Fitt, 1986; Wiklund, 1975). Thus,

even if host were highly attacked by the adult fly, less host use could be seen in such

instances.

1.2. TEPHRITID HOST ACCEPTANCE

Host plant acceptance can be defined as an insect behaviour in which host choice is

not random, but rather selection is based on an insect’s ability to discriminate

between potential host plants based on variation among those plants (Singer, 1986).

Once the host plant was selected for oviposition the insect examine the host surface

for insertion of eggs using the ovipositor or stylet to start utilising the host and this

was defined as the host acceptance (Jung Nam & Hardie, 2012; Powell et al., 1999;

Powell et al., 2006). As used in this chapter, host acceptance refers to the start

utilising the host (or host fruit) by adult oviposition after host selection process of

host plants by flies.

A general theory of phytophagous insect host acceptance has not been well defined.

The reason for this may be because of the range and diversity of potential driving

variables in such systems (Lack, 1947; Roitberg et al., 1999). However, a model for

oviposition behaviour for phytophagous insects has been developed which presumes

that natural selection favours strategies that maximize lifetime reproductive success

(Roitberg et al., 1999). To achieve this insects have to find suitable host(s) within

the available range of potential hosts, while utilising time efficiently (i.e. optimal

foraging). The degree of choosiness among hosts by an insect may be influenced by

both exogenous factors and endogenous factors. Exogenous factors can be host plant

derived (e.g. genotypic and phenotypic differences between hosts, geographic

distribution of plants), while endogenous factors are insect specific factors (e.g. egg

load, age, previous experience, underlying genetics and fecundity) (Courtney et al.,

1989; Miller & Strickler, 1984; Stadler, 1986). Optimal foraging models suggest

that when highly preferred, good quality hosts are common, an insect will be very

discriminating against poor quality hosts, but the level of choosiness will decline

when high quality hosts are less common. The decision to accept or reject hosts is

also likely to be highly influenced by an insect’s current egg load and available

future opportunities to lay eggs (Roitberg et al., 1999). The interaction between host

Page 29: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

5

specific and insect specific factors will impact on the insect’s “decision” whether to

oviposit, or reject a host and continue the search for a more preferred host. In the

following section I detail the different factors that impact on host acceptance by fruit

flies, including fruit characters, fly attributes, and other external factors.

1.2.1 Exogenous Factors Influencing Fruit Fly Host Acceptance

Exogenous factors are stimuli influencing an insect’s oviposition decisions that come

from the environment; most particularly these are host-plant based stimuli, but they

may come from other insects or other external cues. Due to genotypic differences

among plants, host chemical and physical properties can differ greatly, leading to

host discrimination by insects. Similarly plant phenotypic characters (e.g.

development stage, morphology) may affect host quality and an insect’s host

acceptance level.

1.2.1.1 Host physical properties

Some scientists argue that in oviposition site selection by phytophagous insects,

physical stimuli are more important than chemical stimuli, especially in short range

host searching (Renwick, 1989; Szentesi et al., 1979). Host physical properties

include, amongst others, the presence or absence of wounds, physical changes

associated with ripening, and size and shape. All of these are known to influence

fruit flies and specific cases are detailed below.

Pericarp toughness & fruit firmness

Pericarp (= peel or skin) thickness and toughness are major factors that reduce fruit

acceptability to fruit flies (Balagawi, 2005; Messina et al., 1991; Rattanapun et al.,

2009; Staub et al., 2008). Although the pericarp of some fruits soften during

ripening due to physiological changes in the fruit (Messina et al., 1991), the pericarp

may never soften sufficiently for fruit flies to penetrate, even when the fruit is fully

ripe (Bashir et al., 2003; Imsabai et al., 2006). Irrespective of the ripeness level of

mango, pericarp toughness prevented oviposition by Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel)

(Oriental fruit fly), even though mango is a preferred host (Cornelius et al., 2000;

Rattanapun et al., 2009). The relative attractiveness of avocado fruit to B. dorsalis,

avocado and lemon fruits to Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann) (Mediterranean fruit

fly) (Oi & Mau, 1969; Staub et al., 2008; Papachristos & Papadopoulos, 2009), apple

fruits to Rhagoletis pomonella (Walsh) (Apple maggot fly) (Messina & Jones, 1990),

Page 30: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

6

and tomato to B. tryoni (Balagawi, 2005) were all reduced due to pericarp toughness.

These studies, as well as others (Pritchard, 1969; Rull & Prokopy, 2004; Tracewski

et al., 1988), have all reported that oviposition preference in tephritids was

influenced by pericarp toughness, which made the fruit difficult to oviposit into. An

almost unique exception in the literature is Rhagoletis juglandis (Cresson) (walnut

fly), where host preference was not increased with an increase of host penetrability,

even though penetrability increased as ripening progressed (Nufio et al., 2000).

Surface integrity

Fruit wounds and bruising can be produced by ovipositing fruit flies, plant diseases,

other insects and vertebrates, or by abiotic forces such as rain and wind. Fruit

wounding and bruising either destroys the integrity of the fruit peel or, in the case of

bruising, decreases the toughness of peel. This makes the fruit more susceptible to

fruit flies and many fruit fly species prefer to lay eggs into fruit wounds and existing

oviposition punctures (Bateman, 1972; Christenson, 1960; Papaj & Messing, 1996;

Prokopy et al., 1990; Prokopy & Vargas, 1996). For example C. capitata showed a

significantly higher propensity to land on fruit that contained wounds compared to

intact fruit (Papaj et al., 1989), and subsequently preferred fruit where the wound

was deepest (Papaj et al., 1989). The latter study (Papaj et al., 1989) also showed the

fly had a higher propensity to lay eggs in wounded fruit and oviposition is most

likely to occur near or directly into the wound. In addition to simply making

pericarp penetration easier, flies may also select fruit wound sites (including

previous oviposition sites) for oviposition as a time saving strategy (Papaj & Alonso-

Pimentel, 1997), as well as to decrease wear to their ovipositor (Lalonde & Mangel,

1994).

Laying eggs in wounded areas of fruit is speculated to enhance egg hatchability and

larval survival, as well as making fruit penetration easier (Greany et al., 1983; Papaj

et al., 1989; Staub et al., 2008). While the link between oviposition choice and

offspring performance is often made (Balagawi et al., 2005, Fernandes da Silva &

Zucoloto, 1993; Joachim-Bravo et al., 2001b), there is significantly less data directly

linking female oviposition site selection within a fruit and offspring performance. In

undamaged mangoes, but of differing ripeness levels across the fruit, Rattanapun et

al. (2010) found a positive link between adult oviposition site selection and offspring

Page 31: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

7

performance, suggesting that fine scale choices may be made by ovipositing females.

However, the data are ambiguous with respect to wound responses. Alternative

explanations for why female fruit flies prefer wounded fruit do exist and may be

related to the production of chemical stimulants from wound sites. Stange (1999)

demonstrated that the broken skin of fruit allows the escape of large amounts of

respiratory carbon dioxide and volatile substances from inside the fruit. Stange

(1999) suggested and Hull & Cribb (2001a,b) later demonstrated

electrophysiologically that B. tryoni has a carbon dioxide receptor which responds to

carbon dioxide concentrations that are 100ppm above ambient (i.e. 360 ppm). These

carbon dioxide stimuli assisted in short range oviposition site selection by gravid

female B. tryoni, with experiments showing that B. tryoni quickly clustered around

fruit wound spots and would fight each other to gain access to such sites

Stange,1999). Importantly, the number of flies attracted to the wound was carbon

dioxide concentration dependant, reinforcing the dominant role of the chemical

rather than the wound itself. Robacker and Fraser (2002a) have similarly suggested

that the attraction of Anastrepha ludens (Loew) (Mexican fruit fly) to wounded citrus

fruit, but not intact citrus fruit, is mediated by the odour of wounded fruits.

While the literature clearly shows that many fruit flies prefer to oviposit into fruit

wounds, this may not be beneficial to flies in all cases. In some fruit types, or at

certain physiological maturity stages, wound areas may contain resins, latex, or other

wound induced plant products. Such products are known to negatively affect the

survival of B. dorsalis eggs larvae in mangoes and papaya (Joel, 1978; Rattanapun et

al., 2009).

Fruit ripeness

Fruit ripening is a period of active physiological change to the fruit. These changes

are reflected by changes in colour, tissue firmness, aroma, proportion of starch and

free sugar, total soluble solids (TSS), and quantities of other organic compounds.

Ascorbic acid and phenolic acids which may be toxic to immature fruit flies also

decrease as fruit ripens (Bashir et al., 2003; Imsabai et al., 2006; Lalel et al., 2003;

Medlicott & Thompson, 1985; Rattanapun et al., 2009; Yashoda et al., 2007). The

combined effect of these changes influences the oviposition behaviour of many fruit

fly species (Prokopy et al., 1995).

Page 32: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

8

Bactrocera dorsalis shows clear discrimination between different ripening stages of

mango fruit. It was found that as mango ripening progresses, pericarp toughness

decreases and total soluble solids increase. Changes in these traits were positively

correlated with a higher attraction of flies to ripe and fully-ripe mangoes over unripe

mangoes (Rattanapun et al., 2009). Similar experiments conducted with ripening

papaya fruit and B. dorsalis and B. cucurbitae (Coquillett) (Melon fly) yielded

similar outcomes - flies preferred riper fruit (Liquido & Cunningham, 1989). The

concentration of benzyl isothiocyanate, a compound toxic to fruit fly eggs and early

instars and deterrent to adult females decreases as ripening progresses in papaya (Seo

et al., 1982) and was considered the most likely explanation for the preference of

these fruit fly species for ripe papaya (Seo et al., 1982). Rhagoletis indifferens

(Curran) (western cherry fruit fly) is another documented case where fly oviposition

preference increased with fruit ripeness, but in this case preference was thought to be

correlated with increased skin penetrability as fruit ripened (Messina et al., 1991). It

is important to note, however, that over-ripe or rotten fruits are not preferred for

oviposition. Over-ripe fruit resulted in decreased egg lay by R. cerasi (Linnaeus)

(cherry fruit fly) and R. indifferens within cherry fruits (Messina et al., 1991).

Size and shape of fruit

The size of fruit plays an important role in oviposition site selection among fruit flies

(Cytrynowicz et al., 1984; Levinson et al., 2003; Nakagawa et al., 1978; Prokopy &

Bush, 1973; Prokopy et al., 1984; Prokopy & Roitberg, 1984). Visual cues are

important in short range (i.e. within one meter) host finding for R. pomonella

(Prokopy & Roitberg, 1984) and this fly shows a higher propensity to lay eggs in

fruit models whose sizes are similar to their natural hosts (Prokopy, 1968; Prokopy

& Bush, 1973). Large size fruits are less preferred for oviposition by R. pomonella

and the congeneric R. indifferens (Messina, 1990). Ceratitis capitata also showed a

preference for a certain fruit size range (2-4 cm diameter) (Cornelius et al., 1999),

despite these fruits coming from different plant families (Prokopy et al., 1984). Size

also plays a major role in site selection for oviposition by R. cerasi (Papaj &

Messing, 1996; Prokopy, 1969; Prokopy & Boller, 1971) and R. juglandis (Nufio et

al., 2000). These two species were attracted mostly to fruit models of similar size to

cherry fruits. It is thus considered, that for many fruit flies, there is an upper limit

for sphere size, beyond which attractiveness decreases (Duan & Prokopy, 1992;

Page 33: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

9

Prokopy 1968; Prokopy, 1969). As examples, for R. indifferens, a sphere with

diameter of 10 cm diameter was found to be optimal (Mayer et al., 2000), and 8 cm

was the optimal sphere diameter for R. pomonella (Duan & Prokopy, 1992). The

three tephritid species (Dacus tryoni, D. neohumeralis, D. cucuminatus) showed

significantly different attraction to different shape traps. Circular and squar traps

were more attracted than triangular and rectangular traps. Moreover, flies attracted to

10 cm spheres shape traps more than 5 cm sphere traps (Hill & Hooper,1984).

Size alone is not only important in host location by fruit flies, but so also is shape.

Anastrepha suspensa (Loew) (Carribean fruit fly) was more attracted to natural fruit

extracts on convex shaped surfaces (e.g. spheres, hemispheres, ellipsoid objects) than

when the same extract was applied on a flat surface. Wild flies displayed an absolute

preference for domes, whereas laboratory bred flies laid eggs in both domes and flat

surfaces (Greany & Szentesi, 1979; Prokopy & Boller, 1971). Spherical shapes are

more attractive than cylindrical, conical or cubical - shaped fruit models to C.

capitata (Freeman & Carey, 1990; Nakagawa et al., 1978), while A. indifferens was

more attracted to a spherical shape than a rectangle shape (Mayer et al., 2000).

Bactrocera dorsalis were more attracted to spherical - shaped versus block - shaped

fruit models (Cornelius et al., 1999).

Host colour

Oviposition host preference of tephritids can be driven by the colour of the fruit

(Fletcher & Prokopy, 1991; Hill & Hooper, 1984). Owens and Prokopy (1996)

reported that R. pomonella was attracted to a colour reflectance range between 350-

580 nm and with decreasing reflectance intensity the attractiveness of fruit increased.

In other words, this fly species is attracted to darker coloured fruit over light

coloured fruit, with a fruit colour preference going from black, to orange, to red

(Messina, 1990). Rhagoletis cerasi was similarly attracted to dark colours (red,

black and dark orange) (Prokopy, 1969; Prokopy & Boller, 1971), while R.

indifferens had an increasing order of host colour preference from red, to black, to

orange (Messina, 1990). Owens and Prokopy (1996) found that R. pomonella was

not sensitive to the colour hue, but the intensity of reflectance was critically

important. The background (e.g. sky or vegetation) against which the fruit is seen

and the position of the fly when looking at the fruit are also important for R.

Page 34: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

10

pomonella fruit orientation, most likely because of the impact they have on fruit

reflectance (Owens & Prokopy, 1986).

Spectral reflectance preferences for different fly species often fall within quite

narrow limits. Anastrepha suspensa were most attracted to an orange colour with a

peak reflectance wave length range of only 580 – 590 nm (Greany et al., 1977;

Greany & Szentesi, 1979). In contrast, B. tryoni, B. neohumeralis (Hardy) (lesser

Queensland fruit fly), B. cacuminatus (Hering) (solanum fruit fly) and some other

tephritids found in southeastern Queensland showed significant preference to colours

with a peak wavelength between 520 – 540 nm (Hill & Hooper, 1984), and C.

capitata responded to the colour reflecting energy between 500 - 600 nm (Fletcher &

Prokopy, 1991).

When tested in conjunction with other cues, colour is often the most important.

Rhagoletis juglandis females showed significantly greater attraction to green

coloured real fruit and green coloured fruit models (i.e. no odour) over yellow

coloured real fruits and fruit models, indicating that colour itself is the major cue for

that species in choosing oviposition sites (Henneman & Papaj, 1999). Anastrepha

suspensa oviposition preference was highly influenced by the colour of host papaya

fruit. Oviposition preference to green wax domes or real mature green fruit was

significantly higher than to yellow wax domes or ripe yellow or colour-break

green/yellow papaya fruit (Landolt & Reed, 1990; Pena et al., 1986). Colour

preference by B. tryoni to blue or white fruit mimics did not differ with size of the

fruit models (Drew et al., 2003).

In summary, tephritid fruit preference may be driven by a range of physical stimuli,

but often there is one dominant physical factor (e.g. fruit size, colour, ripeness stage,

etc.) influencing the flies. This dominant trait may vary between fruit fly species.

Physical stimulus hierarchies exist in some species, for example in A. suspensa

shape is the primary cue and colour is secondary (Greany & Szentesi, 1979; Szentesi

et al., 1979). Fruit size is a more important criterion than colour and odour in host

acceptance behaviour in C. capitata (Prokopy et al., 1990; Prokopy et al., 1989),

while for B. tryoni, B. neohumeralis and B. cacuminatus colour is secondary and

odour is the primary attractive factor (Hill & Hooper, 1984). It is recognised,

however, that under natural conditions the combination of all these factors may

Page 35: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

11

contribute in different degrees of host acceptance behaviour of tephritids

(Economopoulos, 1989).

1.2.1.2 Fruit Odour

Of all the cues available to a fly for host orientation, it has been argued for some fruit

fly species that the primary cue is olfactory. Bactrocera dorsalis, for example, can

assess oviposition sites through fruit colour and shape alone, and may also utilise

gestation and tactile stimuli, but these are all considered secondary stimuli after

olfactory cues (Jang & Light, 1991; Landolt et al., 1992). The volatiles of many fruit

(e.g. mango, guava, orange) are equally attractive to B. dorsalis (Cornelius et al.,

2000). Not all flies, however, are so strongly responsive to fruit odour, or at least

some fruit odours. The polyphagous C. capitata has the receptor potential to

recognize differences in fruit odours (Hernandez-Ortiz et al., 1996; Light et al.,

1988) and discriminates, by showing preference rankings, between the odours of

different fruit (Hernandez-Ortiz et al., 1996; Prokopy & Vargas, 1996). However,

odour played no significant role in attracting female R. cerasi to host fruit (Prokopy

& Boller, 1971) or for C. capitata to some hosts (Katsoyannos et al., 1986; Levinson

et al., 2003; Light et al., 1988).

Fruit odours not only influence fly attraction, but also oviposition. Egg laying

responses of flies such as R. mendax, (blueberry maggot) and R. pomonella, are

significantly influenced by the attractive effects of fruit chemicals (Averill et al.,

1988; Fein et al., 1982; Frey & Bush, 1990; Prokopy et al., 1973). Odour of ripe

coffee berries has a stronger influence on C. capitata oviposition than the odours of

unripe or ripening berries (Prokopy & Vargas, 1996).

1.2.1.3 Non-volatile host chemicals

In addition to volatile chemicals (i.e. odours), the chemical mediation of tephritid

oviposition is also known to involve non-volatile plant chemicals (Rull & Prokopy,

2004). Phytophagous insects assess non-volatile chemicals through direct physical

contact and can identify both chemical stimulants and deterrents. Evaluation can be

carried out by walking, palpation, use of ovipositor sensilla or “drumming” with the

fore-tarsi. Such behaviour may help insects discriminate suitable oviposition sites at

the “within – fruit” level (Eisemann, 1985; Landolt & Reed, 1990; Renwick, 1989;

Stadler, 1986). The role of non-volatile chemicals can be demonstrated in laboratory

Page 36: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

12

trials using modified, artificial substrates. For example, acidic media stimulated

oviposition, while alkali media reduced oviposition by A. suspensa. Oviposition in

the same species was also reduced by the addition of sodium chloride and copper

sulphate to the oviposition substrate (Szentesi et al., 1979). In contrast, sodium

chloride stimulated oviposition in R. pomonella (Girolami et al., 1986). Plant

chemicals may also have a strong deterrent effect on oviposition. For example

naringin, flavonoid present in grapefruit, is a potent oviposition deterrent for A.

suspensa in laboratory studies (Szentesi et al., 1979). Similarly, calcium chloride is

known to inhibit oviposition in fruits by B. tryoni (Eisemann, 1985).

Host fruit sugar content

Sugar concentration and other nutrients are known to be major stimulants for

oviposition by many tephritids. Use of different citrus fruits by C. capitata is

influenced by sweetness of the fruit; highest infestation is reported from orange

which has higher sugar content than the less utilised, and lower sugar content, lemon

(Staub et al., 2008). Different sugar types influence fly species differentially: fruit

sucrose stimulated oviposition in A. suspensa (Szentesi et al., 1979) and R.

pomonella (Girolami et al., 1986), while fructose is a known oviposition stimulant

for R. completa (Gresson) and B. tryoni (Eisemann, 1985; Tsiropoulos & Hagen,

1979). Sugars are not the only nutritional stimulants. Anastrepha obliqua showed a

higher preference for oviposition substrates containing brewer’s yeast and sucrose.

Brewer’s yeast was identified as the most important attractive agent from those two,

indicating that female flies were more stimulated by protein in oviposition substrates

(Fontellas-Brandalha & Zucoloto, 2004).

1.2.1.4 Influence of insect produced chemicals

Tephritid oviposition behaviour is highly influenced by chemicals produced by

conspecific individuals, as well as those produced by other species. These chemicals

can be produced by larvae inside the fruit, or by an adult on the surface of the fruit.

Oviposition deterring chemicals

Some fruit fly species produce oviposition deterring chemicals (ODCs) to prevent

repeated oviposition in the same fruit by other flies of the same species. Once the

female fly is finished ovipositing, it wipes the ODC onto the fruit by dragging the

ovipositor across the fruit surface. The chemical marker left behind acts as a signal

Page 37: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

13

to other conspecific flies that eggs have been laid in the fruit (Burnett & Jones, 1978;

Rothschild et al., 1988) and is thought to be an evolved mechanism to reduce the

chances of larval overcrowding in fruit (Averill & Prokopy, 1987). ODCs have been

reported in C. capitata (Papaj et al., 1992; Prokopy et al., 1978), R. pomonella

(Averill & Prokopy, 1987; Prokopy 1972; Prokopy & Reynolds, 1998) as well as

many other tephritids, but are not universal across the tephritids, being noticeably

absent in Bactrocera (Fitt, 1984).

Some fruit flies use cues other than ODCs to avoid repetitive oviposition in the one

fruit. For example, juice coming from olive punctures made by ovipositing B. oleae

deters repeated oviposition by conspecific flies: acetophenone and benzaldehyde are

the fruit chemicals responsible for deterring conspecifics in this species (Girolami et

al., 1981). Other Bactrocera species, including B. tryoni and B. jarvisi, discriminate

against fruit thatcontain developing larvae, but do not produce ODCs. In this case

the deterrent cues are chemicals produced as a result of fruit decomposition, caused

by activity of larvae in the infested fruit (Fitt, 1984). Bactrocera dorsalis do not

produce ODCs, but discriminate against fruits containing larvae but not fruit

containing eggs (Prokopy et al., 1989).

1.2.2 Other Exogenous Factors Influencing Host Acceptance by Fruit Flies

Other major factors influencing tephritid host acceptance are biotic components of

the fruit environment. These include parasites, conspecific flies and the chemicals

produced by these organisms. Abiotic components of the environment (e.g. sun

versus shade) are also important. The combination of factors in the fruit

environment influence can influence tephritid host acceptance decisions (Dukas et

al., 2001).

1.2.2.1 Conspecific flies

The presence of conspecifics attracts tephritid flies to fruit in many species. B.

tryoni individuals tend to select fruits that are already occupied by conspecific

females engaged in oviposition behaviour (but not engaged in pre- or post-

ovipositional behaviour). Additionally, oviposition boring by B. tryoni was

relatively quicker when another conspecific was engaged in oviposition (Prokopy et

al., 1999). For R. pomonella, the presence of ovipositing conspecifics was a more

powerful stimulus in oviposition site selection than fruit odours or fruit punctures

Page 38: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

14

(Prokopy & Reynolds, 1998). Ceratitis capitata were similarly attracted to fruits

with conspecific females present (Prokopy et al., 2000), but for this species the

deterrent effect of fruit wounds could override the attractant effect of conspecifics.

The reason behind the influence of conspecific presence on host acceptance is

poorly, or not, understood for tephritids (Prokopy & Reynolds, 1998). There is no

evidence that tephritids on a fruit attract other conspecific females to the fruit

through chemical signals (Prokopy et al., 2000; Yuval & Hendrichs, 2000). In fact,

detection of a conspecific may occur only from very close range (e.g. within 1m),

when there is a strong visual contrast of a fly against the background of the fruit

surface (Prokopy et al., 2000; Prokopy & Reynolds, 1998; Prokopy et al., 1999).

The presence of conspecifics on fruit may also negatively affect oviposition

behaviour of some tephritid species (Papaj & Messing, 1998). While female

aggression on fruit is not observed in some species (e.g. R. pomonella), in the genus

Bactrocera, for example, aggression among females is common (Shelly, 1999).

Aggressive behaviour among females for oviposition sites on a fruit has been

recorded for both B. tryoni and B. dorsalis (Pritchard, 1969; Shelly, 1999), with

nearly 20% of ovipositing B. tryoni females interrupting the oviposition process to

drive off conspecific females (Pritchard, 1969). The lack of ODCs in Bactrocera is

suggested to be the reason why aggression between females in this genus is more

common, because it represents a mechanism to minimise larval crowding in fruit

(Fletcher & Prokopy, 1991). However, despite Pritchard’s (1969) records, and

theoretical expectations (Shelly, 1999), other field work has shown that of 79

recorded ovipositions, only 9 (12.7%) were disturbed by the arrival of conspecific

individuals in B. jarvisi, B. tryoni and B. neohumeralis (Fitt, 1989). This evidence

suggests that aggression on fruit among females in Bactrocera species may not be a

common phenomenon in the field. Such a conclusion is also supported by Bateman

(1968), who found that adult overcrowding in the field among B. tryoni is not

common.

Female contests for oviposition sites are known in flies with an oviposition deterring

compound. Ceratitis capitata females, despite having a fruit marking mechanism,

contest for oviposition sites on fruit. In such contests flies that are actively engaged

in oviposition are more likely to win than flies searching for an oviposition site.

Page 39: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

15

Older flies are also more likely to win a contest than younger ones (Papaj &

Messing, 1998).

1.2.2.2 Abiotic environmental factors

Abiotic environmental factors may influence host acceptability for fruit flies in many

different ways, but it is a generally poorly studied area. Ragholetis cerasi showed a

strong positive response to sunlight in oviposition host selection behaviour and

hence plants exposed to sun were more attractive than plants in shade (Prokopy,

1969). There may be several possible reasons for this relationship. Foliage which is

exposed to sunlight may have greater chlorophyll content, hence making the plant

more visually attractive (Padhi & Chatterji, 1986; Pritchard, 1969). Alternatively,

flies may prefer sunlit fruits when host searching is happening in cooler seasons, as

sunlight will increase the behavioural activity of flies (Prokopy, 1969). Additional

to sunlight, rainfall may affect the host marking mechanism of some tephritids (e.g.

C. capitata), as rainfall can wash ODCs from fruits resulting in repeated oviposition

into already infested fruits (Averill & Prokopy, 1987).

1.2.3 Endogenous Factors Influencing Fruit Fly Host Acceptance

Endogenous factors, in contrast to exogenous factors, refer to insect specific factors

(e.g. physiological state, genotype) that influence the host acceptance decision.

Within the same insect species, each individual will differ to the other with respect to

genetic makeup, age, physiological maturity, egg load and experience with different

host species. Due to these differences in insect state, host acceptance behaviour can

vary between individuals of the same species. Thus, due to endogenous influences,

host acceptance levels can be changed even if exogenous influences remain constant

(Courtney et al., 1989).

1.2.3.1 Experience

Previous experience with a particular fruit species can significantly affect the

subsequent host acceptance behaviour of tephritid fruit flies. In C. capitata, prior

experience strongly influences subsequent oviposition behaviour (Cooley et al.,

1986; Prokopy et al., 1989). The oviposition preference of naive and experienced C.

capitata differ greatly as experienced flies prefer the previously experienced fruit,

while naive flies show no additional preference towards any fruit. Moreover, the

ability of C. capitata’s ability to learn to refuse novel host types is higher than their

Page 40: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

16

ability to learn to accept familiar host types (Cooley et al., 1986). Host preference

ranking does, however, vary through the life of the fly. It is reported that C. capitata

only showed host hierarchy preference only at the beginning of their reproductive

life, but later such behaviour becomes insignificant (Joachim-Bravo et al., 2001a).

The importance of prior host experience has also been shown in other flies. In A.

ludens, host attractiveness is largely driven by previous exposure to the host, but not

by the host itself (i.e. fruit specific characters) (Robacker & Fraser, 2002b).

Bactrocera tryoni (Prokopy & Fletcher, 1987), B. dorsalis (Prokopy et al., 1990) and

R. pomonella (Prokopy et al., 1982) are all cases where it has been shown that prior

experience of a host significantly affects that host’s subsequent acceptability when

ranked among alternative hosts. It is important to note, however, that the retention

period of the memory of host experience can be different with different fruit types of

fruit and is generally very short (only two days for B. tryoni (Prokopy & Fletcher,

1987).

Acceptability of a novel host for an experienced fly may be positively changed

according to the similarity of the novel host characteristics (e.g. size, shape, colour,

chemistry) with those of the fruit previously experienced by the fly (Papaj et al.,

1989; Prokopy et al., 1989). This is known as cross induction, i.e. the tendency for

experience by feeding or ovipositing insects with a host, to alter behavioural

responses to alternative hosts (Papaj et al., 1989). Cross induction has been

investigated in laboratory trials with C. capitata (Papaj et al., 1989). Results

indicated that previous learning about the size and some chemical components of the

initial host changed subsequent host preferences. It was suggested that there is an

internal template of fruit sizes that are accepted to differing degrees by an individual

insect. However, this template “moves” to favour fruit with which females are

experienced and; simultaneously, acceptance of fruits not experienced by the female

is diminished (Papaj et al., 1989).

1.2.3.2 Egg load

Egg load within the ovaries of female insects significantly affects host acceptance

decisions (Aluja et al., 2001; Courtney et al., 1989). Egg load can vary between

individuals based on age, density of female flies, deprivation of preferred hosts and

presence of host semiochemicals (Aluja et al., 2001; Aluja et al., 2003; Fitt, 1986).

Page 41: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

17

For example, younger flies may have fewer eggs than older flies as the ovaries of

younger flies are still maturing (Brevault & Quilici, 1999), while deprivation of

preferred hosts may result in accumulation of eggs in ovaries (Fitt, 1986).

With high egg load (or alternatively high fecundity), an insect’s host range often

broadens to include low ranking hosts (Minkenberg et al., 1992). For example, with

low egg loads mature C. capitata were not attracted to ripening coffee berries, while

high egg load females of the same age were highly attracted to ripening coffee

(Prokopy et al., 1995). In Neoceratitis cyanescens (Bezzi) (tomato fruit fly), high

egg load made the fly more responsive to host fruit (Brevault & Quilici, 1999) and

decreased discrimination shown by the fly between high ranking and low ranking

fruit species (Prokopy et al., 1994).

1.2.3.3 Insect nutritional status

Access to food can influence oviposition behaviour of fruit flies in negative, neutral

or positive ways. Deprivation of food negatively affected the attraction of B.

cucurbitae (Liu & Chang, 1995) and N. cyanescens (Brevault & Quilici, 1999) to

host fruit species. On the other hand, the oviposition behaviour of A. ludens and R.

pomonella was not influenced by short-term nutritional status (Robacker & Fraser,

2001). Sugar and protein deprivation for 18-24 hours did not affect host searching

activity of R. pomonella in field or field cage experiments compared to non-deprived

females (Malavasi & Prokopy, 1992). However, in other systems, C. capitata and R.

mendax were found to have significantly improved host searching activity and host

discovery rates following protein and sucrose exposure, as was R. pomonella in

response to sucrose exposure alone (Averill & Prokopy 1987).

1.3 CLUTCH SIZE

Clutch size is the number of eggs laid in a single oviposition act by a parental female

(Godfray, 1991). While clutch size is often framed in terms of optimality theory of

maximising female fitness within a variable environment and finite life-span

(Godfray 1991; Papaj &Alonso-Pimental, 1997), it can be alternatively viewed that

clutch size variation is simply a mechanical result of changes in insect physiology,

oviposition experience, and host availability and quality (Godfray, 1991; Roitberg et

Page 42: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

18

al., 1999; Rosenheim & Rosen, 1991). While a number of extrinsic and intrinsic

variables have been associated with clutch size variation in tephritids, the following

section concentrates only on host fruit effects, as this is the component most relevant

to this thesis.

1.3.1 Effect of Host Variables on Tephritid Clutch Size

1.3.1.1 Fruit availability

The availability of hosts can affect the clutch size of many polyphagous tephritid

species ( Fitt, 1986; Diaz-Fleischer et al., 2001; Diaz-Fleischer & Aluja, 2003b). In

A. obliqua it has been found that host fruit phenology may indirectly influence

clutches size. Specifically, in an area where most hosts ripened simultaneously,

large egg clutches were laid, a result interpreted by researchers as a mechanism of

the fly to maximise utilisation of fruits while they were available (Aluja et al., 2001).

Another factor that can influence tephritid clutch size is fruit density within a given

area. Fruit density varies in different orchards and fruit trees, and also according to

the fruiting seasons. Clutch size in R. indifferens is inversely dependant on fruit

density within an orchard or a tree (Messina, 1989). For R. juglandis the strongest

determinant of clutch size is the number of times a host is located by the fly in a

given period of time (Ladonde & Mangel, 1994), which provides a potential

mechanism by which fruit density can be measured by females. In contrast, fruit

density did not have significant effect on the clutch size of A. ludens (Berrigan et al.,

1988).

1.3.1.2. Fruit physical properties

Size of fruit

Tephritid clutch size may be influenced by the larval carrying capacity of the host

fruit. Tephritid species which specialize on small host fruit often lay smaller

clutches than flies specializing on larger fruits (Boller & Prokopy, 1976; Fitt, 1989).

However, variable clutch size is commonly seen in polyphagous species (Aluja et al.,

2003; Berrigan et al., 1988; Díaz-Fleischer et al., 2000; Leyva et al., 1991;

McDonald & McInnis, 1985; Skinner, 1985), considered an evolved mechanism to

allow optimal use of fruit of different sizes (McDonald & McInnis, 1985). For

example, in C. capitata there is a highly significant positive correlation between

clutch size and fruit size (McDonald & McInnis, 1985). Similar results have been

Page 43: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

19

found for A. ludens, with an average clutch size of 4.4 eggs in 2 cm diameter fruit

and 12.7 eggs in an 11 cm diameter host (Berrigan et al., 1988). However, clutch

size in A. ludens is not always directly proportional to fruit size, Leyva et al. (1991)

found that while the smallest fruit contained the smallest clutch, the largest clutch

was found in the second - largest fruit. Thus these authors suggested that other host

characters may also influence the clutch size ‘decision’ in A. ludens.

Pericarp toughness

Rind thickness may influence tephritid clutch size (Leyva et al., 1991). In the field

B. tryoni lays many more eggs per puncture into hard pericarp fruits (e.g. apple) than

into soft fruits (e.g. pears) (Pritchard, 1969). Within the same species of fruit, both

R. completa (Ladonde & Mangel, 1994) and A. ludens (Diaz-Fleischer & Aluja,

2003b) have been found to lay larger clutches into hard fruit versus soft fruit. In

laboratory experiments, when fruit was already (artificially) punctured, mean clutch

of C. capitata decreased (McDonald & McInnis, 1985).

1.4 OFFSPRING PERFORMANCE

After eggs have been laid, the subsequently emerging fruit fly larvae are completely

dependent on the host fruit for its food. This resource is limited and larvae have no

opportunity to move to another fruit (Fitt, 1986). Because of variation in the

mechanical, chemical and nutritional quality of fruits, larval development differs

greatly among hosts (Bower, 1977; Diaz-Fleischer & Aluja, 2003). This section of

the review covers key issues affecting offspring survival and development.

1.4.1 Fruit species and cultivar

Variation in host quality can be seen in the same tephritid species between different

host species (Carey, 1984; Ibrahim & Rahman, 1982; Zucoloto, 1993) and within the

host species at the cultivars level (Dirks, 1935; Reissig, 1979). Offspring

performance of C. capitata is significantly different among different host species, for

example larval survival is higher in quince compared to mango and tomato, while

egg mortality is higher in grape, tomato and plum versus mango and quince (Carey,

1984). Pupal weight and development time of A. suspensa differs between cultivars

of carambola (Averrhoa carambola) (Howard & Kenney, 1987). In different

varieties of mango (Namdorkmai, Oakrong ) in Thailand, B. dorsalis larval recovery

Page 44: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

20

and adult eclosion rate was not different among varieties but pupal recovery,

immature development rate and egg to adult duration were different (Rattanapun et

al., 2009). Host fruit not only affects the larvae and pupae, but can also influence the

adults F1. For example the adult longevity of A. fraterculus reared from citrus, guava

and artificial diet survived for a mean of 3 days, 53 days and 161 days respectively

(Aluja et al., 2003).

Studies of the type listed above, for which there are very large numbers in the fruit

fly literature, indicate that there is huge variation in fruit fly offspring performance

based on host differences. The following sections cover in more details what are

some the specific fruit attributes influencing offspring performance.

1.4.2 Fruit ripeness

Ripening of fruits causes many fruit physiological and chemical changes (Bashir et

al., 2003; Yashoda et al., 2007), which helps to provide favourable host

environments for developing tephritid larvae (Bower, 1977; Leyva et al., 1991). The

effects of fruit ripening are largely consistent across fruit flies, for example

increasing ripeness of mango is beneficial to larvae of both A. suspensa (Hennessey

& Schnell, 2001) and B. dorsalis (Rattanapun et al., 2009). Ripening effects can be

due to both a declines in toxic chemicals found in some immature fruit (e.g. benzyl

isothiocyanate in green papaya is toxic to eggs and first instars of B. dorsalis, C.

capitata and B. cucurbitae (Pena et al., 1986; Seo & Tang, 1982) and a

corresponding increase in fruit nutrient levels (Diaz-Fleischer & Aluja, 2003). Fruit

on trees may also contain chemicals that are detrimental to immature fruit flies, with

both Bower (1977) for B. tryoni and Ressig (1979) for R. pomonella finding greater

larval survival in harvested versus unharvested apples.

1.4.3 Presence of non dietary (secondary) compounds in host

The fruit from specific plant families or genera have chemicals that resist fruit fly

egg and larval development (Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et al., 2009;

Papachristos et al., 2008). The acidic media in citrus fruit may not be responsible for

low level of fruit fly larval success in many Citrus species (Spitler et al., 1984; Staub

et al., 2008; Papachristos et al., 2009; Papachristos et al., 2008), but rather the peel

oil is toxic (Back & Pemberton, 1915; Aluja et al., 2003). This literature is reviewed

more comprehensively in later chapters of the thesis.

Page 45: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

21

1.4.4 Presence of nutritional compounds in host

The nutritional composition of fruit varies from species to species and within fruit of

the same species (Wills et al., 1981). Nutritional quality need not only be driven by

fruit genotype, but also phenotypic expression, which can be modified by local

climatic and soil factors (Liquido, 1990; Zucoloto, 1993). Different fruit nutrient

compositions may affect fruit fly larval developmental time, percentage pupal

emergence, adult F1longevity, fecundity and survival rate (Annonymous, 1991; Carey

et al., 1985; Chua, 1991; Ibrahim & Rahman, 1982; Zucoloto, 1993).

Total carbohydrate and acidity have been positively correlated with per cent pupal

emergence, per cent adult emergence and adult size in mango, papaya, carambola

and in star fruit in Bactrocera dorsalis and B. carambolae respectively (Hing, 1991;

Annonymous, 1991). Ceratitis capitata larvae can discriminate between artificial

larval diets containing different nutrient content in the laboratory, as result that was

used to suggest that larvae inside the fruit may move to nutritionally superior areas,

e.g. riper portions of the fruit (Fay, 1988; Zucoloto, 1991). A direct test of this

hypothesis with B. dorsalis larvae in mangoes did not find such larval movement

(Rattanapun, 2010). Other than carbohydrates, balanced supplies of proteins,

vitamins and lipids and minerals are necessary to maximise larval performance in C.

capitata, (Chan et al., 1990; Zucoloto, 1987; Nestel & Nemny-Lavy, 2008). Fruit

may also contain potentially toxic levels of nutritional chemicals. For example,

excess sucrose in an artificial diet significantly delayed C. capitata larval

development, although pupal weights were not affected (Nestel & Nemny-Lavy,

2008).

1.4.5 Fruit physical attributes

Fruit physical properties can slow, deteriorate or completely terminate larval

development. C. capitata larval recovery can be lowered due to an inability of

young larvae to move between carpels in citrus (Bodenheimer, 1951), because host

tissue is too firm for the newly hatched larvae to ingest (e.g. apple, quince)

(Zucoloto, 1993), or because host tissue is too watery for proper egg chamber

formation (e.g. tomato, grape) (Carey, 1984; Zucoloto, 1993). In B. dorsalis,

differential larval survival between fruits has been attributed to differential host

Page 46: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

22

tissue decay and the production of a watery media that is unfavourable for

developing larvae (Ibrahim & Rahman, 1982).

1.5 HOST USE AND POPULATIONS OF TROPICAL TEPHRITIDS

Tephritid host use behaviour has been rigorously investigated in laboratory-based

experiments (Berrigan et al., 1988; McDonald & McInnis, 1985; Prokopy et al.,

1999), but the implications of such host use behaviour are not always followed up in

the field (Oi & Mau, 1969). When tested, laboratory based data may provide

predictions consistent with field observations (Prokopy & Vargas, 1996; Spitler et

al., 1984; Staub et al., 2008; Vargas et al., 1995), may be inconsistent (Messina et

al., 1991; Rattanapun et al., 2009), or may simply not be able to provide the same

information as field observations. In summary, knowing the fine details of tephrtid

host use based on labroatory or field cage trials, is can not immediately be translated

to understanding field populations of flies. In this short section, the literature

review covers tephritid host use in the field and the population consequences.

1.5.1 Fruit Phenology

Fruit phenology (and hence abundance) is considered the major factor influencing

tephritid phenology and abundance in the field (Dorji et al., 2006; Hurtado et al.,

1995; Messina & Jones, 1990). The phonologies of univoltine, hot specialist species

are typically very closely associated with the phenology of their hosts, a pattern

common across herbivorous insects. For example the abundance of the host – races

of R. pomonella are closely associated with late maturing apple and early maturing

hawthorn fruits respectively (Messina, 1990), while cherry fruit ripeness is closely

correlated with adult abundance of R. indifferens (Messina et al., 1991). The

abundance of polyphagous tephritid species is also likely to be driven by host

availability, as even in tropical areas flies are not equally abundant all year round

(Torra Vueti et al., 1997; Clarke et al. 2001; Tan & Serit, 1994; Shukla & Prasad,

1985; Hurtado et al., 1995). Peaks of B. tryoni populations in late spring and early

summer in far northern Queensland were attributed by Muthuthantri et al. (2010),

Drew &Hooper (1983) & Drew et al., (1984) to the timing of peak fruiting in local

rainforest.

Page 47: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

23

1.5.2 Local Host Plant Composition

The composition of different host plants in an area throughout the year may also

affect tephritid population phenology, with different hosts ‘serving’ different

purposes (Aluja et al., 1996; Katsoyannos et al., 1998). Ceratitis capitata population

abundance is highly associated with host fruit abundance and phenology, but for

different purposes (Harris & Lee, 1986; Katsoyannos et al., 1986; Papadopoulos et

al., 1996). In northern Greece C. capitata larvae successfully overwinter in certain

types of evergreen host trees, especially citrus, which provide physical shelter for

adults while the fruits of sweet orange and mandarin trees provide continuous

breeding resources for larvae (Mavrikakis et al., 2000; Papadopoulos et al., 1996).

Flies emerging in late winter remain in the area and breed in early season fruit

varieties, such as apricot and bitter orange. Later in the season hosts like sweet

orange and fig appear, which again provided breeding resources for C. capitata.

Thus the combination of hosts within the local area strongly impacts on local C.

capitata abundance (Katsoyannos et al., 1998). Such sequential host use is thought

to be common for most polyphagous, multivoltine fruit flies (Eskafi & Kolbe, 1990;

Carey, 1984; Aluja et al., 1996; Clarke et al., 2011a).

1.6 SCOPE AND STRUCTURE OF THESIS

The above literature review has identified that there are many fruit related factors

involved in tephritid host utilization behaviour. Various host physical and chemical

factors, as well as insect specific factors and external environmental factors influence

host use patterns of tephritid flies. In a broader review of literature, work on host use

behaviour of B. tryoni was noticeably lacking, with only a few laboratory based

papers on adult preference or larval performance aspects of host use, nothing on

mechanistic explanation for host use, and only correlative assumptions made about

the link between B. tryoni host use and population abundance in the field. Such gaps

in knowledge were also recognised in a recent review focusing explicitly on B. tryoni

(Clarke et al., 2011a).

As B. tryoni is the most important insect pest of horticulture in Australia, and

potentially a model organism for other Bactrocera pest species throughout Africa,

Asia, Australia and the Pacific, lack of detailed knowledge of its host use behaviour

is a serious gap in knowledge. Because B. tryoni is highly polyphagous (Hancock et

Page 48: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

24

al., 2000), there are two potential ways to study host use. One is to study a group of

highly divergent host fruits and try to discover commonalities between them that

make them hosts, the second is to take a group of related hosts and look for

differences that may be associated with differential host use. The former approach

was used by Fitt (1983; 1984; 1986) but, the latter approach is the one used in this

thesis.

I have used as my model system citrus fruits. The use of citrus was largely a

pragmatic choice, based on the availability of a large body of baseline data available

for B. tryoni populations in a subtropical citrus production area in south-east

Queensland (Lloyd 2007; Lloyd et al., 2000, 2010). Citrus is also a crop with an

annual production in Australia of well over 620,000 mt (Horticultural Australia Ltd),

nearly all of which is grown in eastern Australia, and so susceptible to B. tryoni

attack. Working on B. tryoni in citrus thus offers wider societal benefits if the

research can help enhance sustainable controls.

The focus of my thesis is on increasing our knowledge of B. tryoni host utilization.

The host use behaviour was studied under different ecological and behavioural

scales, ranging from very fine (literally microscopic) analysis of fly and host fruit

interactions, through to population assessments by using laboratory and field data to

parameterise a B. tryoni population model. In order to explore B. tryoni citrus host

use, the following specific objectives were set for this study.

- To investigate adult B. tryoni oviposition preference and offspring

performance in different citrus types under laboratory choice and no-choice

conditions

- To investigate citrus peel physical attributes influencing B. tryoni oviposition

behaviour and larval survival

- To investigate citrus peel chemical attributes influencing B. tryoni egg and

larval survival

- To investigate adult B. tryoni oviposition preference and fly production

among citrus fruits in field and semi-field conditions

- To test the effects of host quality and host abundance on B. tryoni population

dynamics using a mechanistic, cohort based population model.

Page 49: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

25

Given these aims, the flow of research chapters is as follows. In the first research

chapter (Chapter 2), B. tryoni oviposition preference and offspring performance are

recorded among five Citrus species/varieties (Murcott mandarin, Navel orange,

Valencia orange, Eureka lemon, yellow grapefruit) under choice and no-choice

laboratory conditions. The citrus types chosen for this study was based on the

popular citrus types grown in subtropical Queensland. Adult oviposition preference

was measured by time taken for first visit by a female fly, the number of oviposition

events, the number of total eggs laid and the clutch size. Immature stage survival

was measured by mean pupal and adult emergence. This chapter, published as

Muthuthantri and Clarke (2012), concludes that B. tryoni females exhibited an

oviposition preference hierarchy among the different citrus, and that the citrus fruits

tested are very poor egg/larval hosts for B. tryoni. Exploring the reasons for poor

larval host status of citrus for B. tryoni then became the focus for the next two

chapters.

In Chapter 3, the peel physical and morphological properties of the same five citrus

types were investigated using stereo-microscopy and light-microscopy. Uninfested

and infested citrus peel tissue physical properties were compared among different

citrus types and peel properties and ovipositor depth were correlated. Chapter 3

results showed that B. tryoni lays eggs in the region of the peel where the peel

chemicals are concentrated (i.e. the flavedo layer) for all studied citrus types except

mandarin. I in Chapter 4 I focus on understanding the impact of citrus peel

chemicals on B. tryoni egg and larval survival. Citrus peel essential oil was

extracted from each citrus type using hydro-distillation and subsequently used on

larval feeding bioassays. Bioassays were run not only using the crude oil extracts,

but also using pure chemicals selected from the essential oil fractions. While

Chapter 3 demonstrated that B. tryoni lays eggs into the oil rich flavedo layer in the

majority of citrus types, the data from Chapter 4 then demonstrated that citrus peel

oils have significant toxic effects on B. tryoni eggs and larvae.

Citrus host utilization by B. tryoni in Chapter 2, 3 and 4 were based on experiments

conducted entirely under laboratory conditions. To ensure that patters seen in

laboratory were reflected in field host usage, the experiment reported in Chapter 5

was undertaken in the field using unpicked fruit on host trees. Three citrus types,

Page 50: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

26

Ellendale mandarin, Erureka lemon and Navel lemon were the three citrus types

considered while nectarine, a highly preferred B. tryoni host (Ero et al. 2011) was

used for comparison. The results of this chapter confirmed the laboratory studies

and demonstrated the poor host status of citrus, particularly when compared to a

stone-fruit.

In Chapter 6 my aim was to examine the effect of variable host quality and

abundance on the population dynamics of B. tryoni in tropical and subtropical

systems, where abiotic variables (particularly temperature) should not greatly limit

populations (Yonow & Sutherst, 1998). To test the effects of host on B. tryoni

population dynamics, I used DYMEX, an ecological modelling tool, and

incorporated larval mortality due to host quality as a mortality parameter. The

sensitivity of the model to the parameter was assessed through sensitivity analysis.

The model was then used to compare the predicted population dynamics of B. tryoni

in different hypothetical host systems, where there were either large numbers of poor

hosts (e.g. a commercial citrus growing area),large number of good hosts, orlow

numbers of good hosts. This chapter concluded that the quality, but not necessarily

the quantity of hosts is critical for the maintenance of B. tryoni populations in

tropical and subtropical agricultural production systems.

The final chapter integrates the results from of each of the research chapters and

discusses selected theoretical and applied implications of the findings, as well as

identifying possible fruitful areas for further research.

Page 51: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

27

CHAPTER 2

Oviposition Preference and Offspring Performance

of Bactrocera tryoni Among Citrus Types

This chapter has been published as, .

Muthuthantri, S. & Clarke, A.R. (2012) Five commercial citrus rate poorly as

hosts of the polyphagous fruit fly Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera:

Tephritidae) in laboratory studies. Australian Journal of Entomology, 51, 289–

298.

2.1 INTRODUCTION

Page 52: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

28

2.1. INTRODUCTION

Fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) are among the most serious fruit pests in the world

(Bateman, 1972; Aluja & Mangan, 2008). Most fruit fly species have a similar life

cycle in which mated females lay eggs into ripe fruit where the subsequent larvae

feed and develop, before leaving the fruit to pupate in soil (Christenson, 1960).

While some pestiferous tephritids have relatively small larval host ranges, such as

the monophagous Bactrocera oleae (Rossi) on olive (Fletcher & Kapatos, 1981), and

oligophagous species such as Rhagoletis pomonella (Walsh) (Prokopy & Roitberg

1984; Prokopy & Diehl, 1988), many of the major pests are polyphagous, including

species such as Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann), Anastrepha fraterculus

(Wiedemann) and Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Robinson & Hooper, 1989).

Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) is one such polyphagous fruit fly species, native to

eastern Australia, which has a wide host range of native and cultivated fruits (May

1963; Hancock et al., 2000). It is generally accepted by fruit fly workers that B.

tryoni prefers mature fruit and exhibits a preference hierarchy for hosts (Bower

1977; Fitt, 1986; Bateman, 1991; Balagawi, 2006; Clarke et al., 2011a). The

oviposition choice of Bactrocera tryoni is influenced by fruit specific characters

including colour (Drew et al., 2003), surface wounds (Stange, 1999) and pericarp

toughness (Balagawi et al., 2005); learning may also influence host use in this fly

(Prokopy & Fletcher, 1987). In general, however, the factors influencing B. tryoni

host use and the fly’s preference rankings between different fruit species and

cultivars remain poorly investigated (Fletcher & Prokopy, 1991; Clarke et al.,

2011a).

In Australia, B. tryoni is regarded as an important insect pest of commercial and non-

commercial citrus and impacts heavily on both domestic and international citrus

trade (Heather et al. 1996; De Lima et al., 2007; Lloyd et al., 2010). No quantified

data has been published on the fly’s preferential host use of citrus, although qualified

statements have been made (Smith et al., 1997; Hancock et al., 2000 ; Friend, 1957)

reported in which on the lethal effects of citrus peel oil to B. tryoni eggs and larvae.

Reports on direct citrus use in field are conflicting and while it is generally

considered that citrus is a relatively poor, or infrequently used host of B. tryoni (Hely

et al., 1982; Smith et al., 1997; Lloyd, 2007), season may play a part with early and

Page 53: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

29

late season crops (i.e. autumn and spring crops) being considered more susceptible

(Veitch & Simmonds, 1929; Smith et al., 1997). Fruit is not normally considered

susceptible until it is green mature (Smith et al., 1997), but quantified studies on

citrus ripening and B. tryoni host use have not been published.

In other fruit fly-citrus systems, host usage rankings have been quantified. In the

Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata, preference rankings for citrus have been

demonstrated in both the field (Katsoyannos et al., 1998) and laboratory

(Papachristos et al., 2008; Papachristos & Papadopoulos, 2009). For example, C.

capitata shows a greater preference for oranges and mandarin than it does towards

lemons (Salvatore et al., 2004; Papachristos & Papadopoulos, 2009). Oviposition

preference in Mediterranean fruit fly is influenced by citrus fruit characteristics

including peel oil concentration, colour, peel thickness and toughness, acidity level

and sugar content (Bodenheimer, 1951; Staub et al., 2008; Levinson et al., 1990;

Papachristos et al., 2009). In addition to variation in female oviposition preference,

offspring performance also differs across citrus types for different fruit fly species

(Spitler et al., 1984; Krainacker et al., 1987). Lemon was consistently the poorest

larval host among commercial citrus types for C. capitata (Spitler et al., 1984;

Papachristos et al., 2008), Anastrepha ludens (Loew) (Leyva et al., 1991) and

Anastrepha suspensa (Loew) (Greany et al., 1983). Grapefruit, in contrast, is a

favourable host for immature stages of A. luden (Leyva et al., 1991) and A. suspensa

(Greany, 1985) compared to orange varieties, while orange is a better host for

immature C. capitata compared to mandarin (Staub et al., 2008).

Market access of the Australian citrus crop is heavily impacted upon by B. tryoni

(Lloyd, 2000; Lloyd et al., 2010). Better quantification of B. tryoni host preference

and performance across different citrus types will help support field management

strategies, including the possible creation of areas of low pest prevalence (IPPC,

2008), as well as assisting in market access negotiations. In this laboratory-based

study, I investigated B. tryoni oviposition preference and offspring performance

among five Australian commercial citrus types; valencia orange, naval orange,

murcott mandarin, yellow grape-fruit and eureka lemon. Oviposition was evaluated

through both choice and no-choice tests and offspring performance assessed through

both natural oviposition and artificial egg placement. I also followed host effects

Page 54: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

30

through to the F1 generation by assessing F1 female egg production in citrus reared

flies. Finally, female oviposition preference was correlated against the fruit factors

size, peel toughness and sugar content (measured as brix).

2.2 METHODS

2.2.1 Flies and fruit

All experiments were conducted under laboratory condition (25°C, 76 ± 3% RH,

fluorescent light 2000 lux) at the [Queensland] Department of Employment,

Economic Development and Innovation (DEEDI) laboratories at Indooroopilly,

Brisbane. Bactrocera tryoni used in these experiments were taken from laboratory

cultures 34 -37 generations old and reared on a carrot based medium (Christenson et

al. 1956). Flies used in experiments came from sub-culture cages holding

approximately 50 individuals and were consistently between 10 to 14 days old when

used. Flies in all trials had ad libetum access to protein, water and sugar, but no

oviposition substrate until used in experiments.

Citrus varieties used were Murcott mandarin (Citrus reticulata Blanco), Navel

orange and Valencia orange (Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck), Eureka lemon (Citrus

limon (L.) Burm. f.) and yellow grapefruit (Citrus paradisi Macf.) (Fig.2.1). All

fruits were purchased as certified organically produced. All fruits purchased were

organic, naturally de-greened ripe fruit and were one to two weeks in post-harvest

storage. Fruits were purchased separately for each experiment and were used within

one day of delivery to the lab.

Page 55: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

31

Figure: 2.1: Five citrus types used for oviposition preference and offspring

performance study.

2.2.2 Choice and no-choice oviposition tests

Due to their different fruiting seasons, not all fruit types were available at any one

time for experiments. Thus, for choice tests, fruit needed to be divided into two

groups. Group 1 fruits (available fresh from the field from mid-September to mid-

October) were Navel orange, lemon and Murcott mandarin; while Group 2 fruits

(available from end of October to mid-December) were Valencia and grapefruit. On

the day of an experiment the required fruit were removed from refrigeration, washed

thoroughly and allowed to dry under ambient temperature. The area of stem

attachment for each fruit was covered with wax to avoid flies ovipositing into an area

that is not exposed when fruit are on the tree.

In choice tests, one fruit of each type from the same group was hung in a 30 cm x 30

cm transparent observation cage by a plastic wire without breaking the peel of the

fruit (Fig.2.2 A). In the field both male and female flies can be present on fruit and

the presence of males can impact upon female oviposition behaviour (Prokopy &

Reynolds 1998; Prokopy et al., 1999): thus both male and female flies were released

into each cage. At 10.00 am six female and six male flies were released into the

cage and continuously observed until 2.00 pm. This time period was based on

Page 56: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

32

preliminary observations that showed flies were most active during this period; it

also matches the peak oviposition period of B. tryoni in the field (Ero et al., 2011).

The choice experiment was replicated 16 times for Group 1 fruits and 19 times for

Group 2 fruits. In no-choice experiments conditions were identical, except only one

fruit of each citrus type was hung in an observation cage and each fruit type was

replicated nine to 11 times (Fig. 2.2B).

Figure 2.2: Observation cages with hanging citrus fruits for choice and no

choiceexperiments inside the laboratory. Plastic trays are water trays for the flies.

(A) Fruits hung for choice experiment (B) Fruit hung for no choice experiment.

The same oviposition preference parameters were recorded in both choice and no-

choice tests. For each replicate these parameters were: (i) time taken to first fruit

visit by a female fly (for each fruit type in choice tests); (ii) number of oviposition

events in each fruit (summed for all flies); and (iii) total number of eggs laid per

fruit. An oviposition event was defined as a fly inserting her ovipositor and

remaining in that position for more than two minutes. After a female had left the

oviposition site that location was marked with a pen and later dissected to count the

number of eggs laid. Prior to egg counting, fruit were held at 10°C for three days

which made the oviposition site more clearly visible. The number of eggs in the egg

chamber was counted under 10 × magnification.

2.2.3 Clutch size evaluation

Because flies sometimes reuse an oviposition site, it was not always easy to gain an

accurate measure of clutch size (the number of eggs laid in a single oviposition

event) in the previous experiments. To better determine clutch size, a factor known

Page 57: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

33

to vary between fruits of different quality for fruit flies (Pritchard, 1969; McDonald

& McInnis, 1985; Diaz-Fleischer & Aluja 2003), a supplementary set of experiments

were run. Choice and no-choice arenas as described above were re-run, with six

female and six male flies released into the observation cage at 10.00 am. Once a fly

oviposited into a fruit and had departed, that fruit was marked and removed from the

cage, being replaced with a new, matching fruit piece. The experiment was

terminated at 2.00 pm and clutch size determined following dissection as described

above. Because fruit were removed and replaced following oviposition, the number

of fruit available for clutch size evaluation varied between fruit types, depending on

how they were utilised by flies. Thus in choice tests the number of fruits exposed to

choice environment were as follows; 12 Murcott, 15 Navel, 16 lemon, 10 Valencia

and 14 grapefruit. In no-choice test number of fruits exposed was 23 Murcott, 25

Navels, 12 lemons, 16 Valencia and 19 grapefruit.

2.2.4 Immature performance of B. tryoni in citrus

The performance of immature (egg + larval) B. tryoni stages in the five citrus types

was assessed through the measure of number of pupae recovered from infested fruit.

Pupation success was recorded as the number of successfully eclosed adult flies.

Fruit were infested with eggs via two methods, artificial inoculation and natural

infestation (i.e. oviposition). The former method allows knowledge of the exact

number of eggs at the start of the trial, but is potentially confounded by the artificial

placement, while the later method starts with naturally placed eggs but the number of

eggs needs to be approximated.

Eggs for artificial inoculation were gained from 10-14 day old females using apple

domes. To infest a fruit a flap of peel was cut at a ~ 30°angle in two places and 10

eggs were placed inside each cut. The peel flap was closed with tape and the fruit

stored individually on moist vermiculite at 25°C and 76% RH until pupation. For

natural infestation, six male and six female flies were released into an observation

cage in which was hung a single fruit. Flies were kept in the cage from 10.00 am to

2.00 pm and the number of oviposition events recorded. The number of eggs in each

fruit was then estimated by multiplying the number of oviposition events by the

mean clutch size estimated from the clutch size evaluation trials. Fruits were then

stored until pupation as for the artificially inoculated fruit. The replicate size for this

Page 58: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

34

trial varies from 9 to 15 fruit pieces per fruit type, dictated by our ability to get flies

to oviposit into fruit.

Three weeks after infestation vermiculite was sieved to check for pupae. Thereafter,

sieving was done weekly for three weeks. At the final sieving, fruits were split

opened to check for pupae inside the fruit. Counted pupae were replaced into damp

vermiculite until emergence, when the number and sex of the flies were recorded.

2.2.5 Fecundity of B. tryoni reared from citrus

Flies emerging from the different citrus types were reared independently until

sexually mature. When flies were 14 days old fecundity was measured at weekly

intervals for four weeks. Availability of flies from the previous trial dictated sample

size in this trial. This resulted in the following cages of flies being established: ex

lemon 3♂, 5♀; ex Navel orange 13♂, 10♀; ex Murcott 12♂, 12♀; ex grapefruit

12♂, 12♀. Once a week apple-juice smeared plastic egging domes were placed in

each cage for one hour. The eggs from each cup were then counted.

2.2.6 Assessment of fruit characteristics

At the end of each oviposition trial (both choice and no-choice), three fruit

characteristics were measured for each fruit used: fruit diameter, peel toughness and

brix value (sugar content). Fruit diameter was measured using vernire callipers;

average fruit peri-carp toughness was measured using a Penetrometer (QA Supplies

Fruit Pressure Tester Model FT 011, measuring range from 0-1000g force) with four

readings per fruit; while a brix meter (Black RHB-32ATC Brix Refractometer,

measuring range from 0-32% brix), was used for measuring the total sugar.

Data analysis

Data in the paper is summarised as the mean ± SE and alpha is set as 0.05. No-

choice test data was analysed using one way ANOVA with citrus fruit type as the

independent variable and total eggs laid, number of oviposition events and clutch

size as dependant variables. Post hoc pair-wise comparisons were made using

Tukey’s test or LSD test depending on equality of variance and equality of sample

size. In choice trials, most data from Group 1 fruit (Murcott, Navel and lemon)

violated assumptions of normality after transformation and were analysed using the

non-parametric equivalent of the ANOVA, the Kruskal Wallis test, with post hoc

Page 59: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

35

pair-wise comparisons made using the Mann Whitney U test. Testing of difference

between treatment means for Group 2 fruits (Valencia and grapefruit) were done

using a two-tailed t-test. It is important to note that in the choice tests Group 1 trials

and Group 2 trials are entirely independent of each other and no comparisons should

be made between fruit across the two trials. Comparisons across all five fruit can

only be done for the no-choice trials.

All data on fruit characteristics violated tests of normality after transformation and so

was analysed using the Kruskal Wallis H test with the Mann Whitney U test as the

post hoc. The Pearson correlation coefficient was used to assess statistical

relationships between fruit characteristics (peel toughness, brix value, fruit diameter)

and host utilization parameters (total eggs laid, oviposition number and clutch size).

2.3 RESULTS

2.3.1 Oviposition choice tests

There was a significant fruit effect on time to first female visit for Group 1 fruits

(Murcott, Navel and lemon) (F2,46=4.02, p=0.025). Flies took longer to first visit

Navel than to Murcott, with the time to first visit lemon not different from either

Navel or Murcott (Fig2.3a). For group 2 fruits (Valencia and grapefruit), the time to

first visit did not differ between the fruits (t36 = -1.7, p = 0.08) (Fig 2.3b).

The number of oviposition events was significantly higher on Murcott mandarin than

the other two fruits, which were not different from each other (H2 = 11.5, p = 0.03)

(Fig 2.3c). Significantly more eggs were laid into Murcott, followed by Navel, with

very few eggs laid into lemon (H2 = 22.8, p < 0.05) (Fig 1e). For Group 2 fruits the

number of oviposition events was significantly higher in grapefruit than Valencia (t36

= - 2.5, p = 0.01) (Fig 1d), and significantly more eggs were laid into grapefruit than

Valencia (t36 = -2.1, p = 0.03) (Fig 2.3f).

Clutch size differences in the supplementary choice tests were not statistically

compared across replicates as lemon was laid into only two out of 16 replicates,

while no eggs were laid into Valencia in 14 replicates. Mean (±SE) clutch size for

each fruit combined across replicates was as follows: Murcott 16 ± 3.9 (n = 12

oviposition events), Navel 9 ± 2.0 (n = 15), lemon 1 (n = 1), and grapefruit 15 ± 2.3

(n = 14).

Page 60: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

36

Citrus type

Murcott Navel Lemon

No.

of e

ggs

0

20

40

60

80

a b

a

a

a

b

b

Citrus type

Valencia Grapefruit

No.

of o

vipo

sitio

n ev

ents

0

2

4

6

8c. d.

a

b b a

b

Citrus type

Murcott Navel Lemon

No.

of o

vipo

sitio

n ev

ents

0

2

4

6

8a

b b

a

bc

e.

Citrus type

Valencia Grapefruit

No.

of e

ggs

0

20

40

60

80f.

a

b

a

b

ab

a.

Citrus type

Murcott Navel Lemon

Tim

e to

firs

t vis

it (m

ins)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

a

b

ab

Citrus type

Valencia Grapefruit

Tim

e to

firs

t vis

it (m

ins)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

a

a

b.

Figure 2.3: Different mean (±SE) measures of Bactrocera tryoni ovipositional

response to five different citrus types offered in either a three-way (a, c, e) or two-

way (b, d, f) choice test. The behavioural responses recorded are: (a, b) time in

minutes between fly release and first visit a fruit; (c, d) number of oviposition

events; and (e, f) number of eggs laid. The different fruit types are split into the two

groups based on their shared fruiting season in the field. Figures a, c, e; n = 16

replicates of the combined response of six female flies simultaneously offered one

piece of each of three fruit types. Figures b, d, f; n = 19 replicates of the combined

response of six female flies simultaneously offered one piece of each of two fruit

types.

Page 61: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

37

2.3.2 Oviposition no-choice tests

When flies were offered single fruits there was a significant fruit effect (F4,43 = 5.4, p

= 0.001) on the time for first female visit. Flies took significantly longer to first visit

lemon than all fruit types except Navel. There was no significant difference in time

taken to first visit Murcott, Navel and grapefruit (Fig 2.4a). The number of

oviposition events into Murcott, Valencia and grapefruit were not significantly

different from each other and were significantly greater than the number of

oviposition events into Navel and lemon (F 4, 42 = 6.7, p < 0.05) (Fig.2.4b). Murcott

and grapefruit received significantly more eggs than Navel and lemon, with both

fruit pairs not significantly different from each other. The total number of eggs

received by Valencia was not statistically different to any other fruit type (F 4,42 =

4.92, p = 0.02) (Fig 2.4c).

Oviposition only occurred in two out of the 12 lemon replicates (total of 10eggs

laid), so this fruit was not included in statistical comparisons of mean clutch size

across fruit types. For the remaining four fruit, under a no-choice environment, there

was a significant fruit effect (F (3,54) = 5.3, p = 0.03) on mean B. tryoni clutch size.

Mean clutch size of Murcott was significantly higher than Navel, Valencia and

grapefruit, which were not significantly different from each other (Fig 2.4 d).

Page 62: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

38

a.

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Lemon

Valencia

Grapefruit

Tim

e to

firs

t vis

it (m

ins)

20

40

60

80

100

b.

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Lemon

Valencia

Grapefruit

No.

of o

vipo

stio

n ev

ents

2

3

4

5

6

7

8 a

b

b

a a

aabc

b

c

a

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Valencia

Grapefruit

Clu

tch

size

0

5

10

15

20

25

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Lemon

Valencia

Grapefruit

No.

of e

ggs

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

c. d.

a

b bb

a

b b

ab

a

Figure 2.4: Different mean (±SE) measures of Bactrocera tryoni ovipositional

response to five citrus fruit types when offered under no-choice conditions: (a) time

in minutes between fly release and first visit to the fruit; (b) number of oviposition

events; (c) number of eggs laid and (d) clutch size (lemon was not included in the

graph as not enough oviposition occurred in the experiment). N = nine replicates per

fruit type, each replicate consisting of the combined response of six female flies

simultaneously offered one piece of fruit.

Page 63: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

39

a.

c.

b

bc c

a

a

b

bc c

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Lemon

Valencia

Grapefruit

Frui

t dia

met

er (c

m)

6.0

6.5

7.0

7.5

8.0

8.5

9.0

aa

b

a

c

b.b .

a

ac

b

a

c

a

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Lemon

Valencia

Grapefruit

Pee

l tou

ghne

ss (g

)

300

400

500

600

700

a

ac

b

a

c

Citrus type

MurcottNavel

Lemon

Valencia

Grapefruit

Brix

val

ue

6

8

10

12

a

a

b

bc c

Figure 2.5: Mean (±SE) (a) fruit diameter, (b) peel toughness and (c) sugar content

of five, ripe citrus fruits. N (Murcott) = 10, n (Navel) = 14, n (lemon) = 18, n

(Valencia) = 54, n (grapefruit) = 56).

Page 64: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

40

2.3.3 Fruit characteristics

There was a significant difference in fruit size (H4 = 85.9, p< 0.005), peel toughness

(H4 = 109.5, p <0.005), and brix value (H4 = 54.3, p < 0.005) among the citrus fruit.

Grapefruit was the largest fruit type tested with lemon the smallest; Murcott, Navel

and Valencia were not significantly different to each other (Fig. 2.5a). Lemon peel

was significantly tougher than all other fruit types, while grapefruit had the softest

peel: the other fruit types were intermediate between these two (Fig. 2.5b). Murcott

and Navel had significantly higher sugar content in the juice than other fruit types,

but were not different to each other. Lemon had a significantly lower sugar content

than grapefruit, but not different to Valencia (Fig. 2.5c). In all cases except peel

toughness there were no significant correlations between the measured fruit

parameters and B. tryoni oviposition behaviour parameters. Only peel toughness of

all fruit combined showed a significant negative correlation with total eggs laid (r ) =

-0.4, p < 0.01,n=50) and the number of oviposition events (r = -0.3, p < 0.01,n=50).

2.3.4 Immature performance

When 15 fruit of each fruit type were artificially inoculated with 20 eggs each, pupae

failed to emerge from lemon, Valencia and grapefruit. Pupae were recovered from

artificially inoculated Navel (two fruits, total of seven pupae) and Murcott (three

fruits, 17 pupae). When flies were allowed to deposit eggs into fruit, more pupae

were recovered, although recovery was still low from all fruits except Murcott.

Significantly more larvae pupated from Murcott than lemon and Valencia, which

were not significantly different from each other, while pupation from Navel and

grapefruit did not differ from each other or the other three fruit types (H4 = 27.2, p <

0.005) (Fig 2.6).

Based on the estimated initial starting egg loads in the naturally inoculated fruit, only

a very low percentage of eggs developed through to pupation in all fruit types (Table

2.1). With an estimated 21% immature (i.e. egg + larvae) stage survival, Murcott

supported the highest offspring survival rates in comparison to other fruit types. In

contrast no pupae emerged from Valencia orange, even though it is estimated to have

received a mean of 32 eggs per fruit. Similarly grapefruit received the highest mean

number of eggs per fruit, but showed the second lowest pupal emergence rate at an

estimated 2%. Paradoxically, while survival rate of eggs/larvae to pupation in

Page 65: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

41

grapefruit was very low, adult eclosion of the pupae which did emerge was very high

at >80%. Pupal eclosion rates were similarly high in Murcott, but were much lower

(40-60%) in lemon and Navel oranges (Table 2.1).

2.3.5 Fecundity of B. tryoni reared from citrus

This trial was significantly impacted upon by the low number of adult flies reared

from the different citrus fruit; itself a telling result. No data was therefore recorded

for Valencia oranges which yielded no adult flies, while the 12 female flies from

grapefruit and the five females flies from lemon produced no eggs. The 12 females

from Murcott produced a mean of 26 ± 58 eggs per week for four weeks, while the

10 females from Navel oranges produced a mean of 42 ± 15 eggs per week for four

weeks. Egg production was not related to the number of available females, as

evidenced by the disparity in egg production between flies from Murcott and Navel.

Citrus type

Murcott Navel Lemon Valencia Grapefruit

Pupa

l rec

over

ed

0

5

10

15

20

25

30 a

abb

b

ab

Figure 2.6: Mean (±SE) number of Bactrocera tryoni pupae recovered from

different citrus fruits following natural infestation. N= 9 single fruit replicates for

Murcott, Navel and grapefruit, 10 single fruit replicates for Valencia and 15 single

fruit replicates for lemon. Estimated starting number of eggs for each single fruit

replicate within a fruit type are: Murcott 96 eggs/fruit, Navel 33, Eureka lemon 29,

Valencia 32, grapefruit 121.

Page 66: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

42

The data pertains to fruit into which B. tryoni were allowed to naturally oviposit for a

four hour period. Mean number of eggs laid per fruit is an estimate calculated by

multiplying the observed number of oviposition events during those four hours by

the mean clutch size per oviposition event in those fruit types. Mean clutch size was

calculated through fruit dissection in a separate study. ‘Final estimated percent

production’ is calculated by multiplying ‘% pupal recovery’ converted to a whole

number (e.g. 21% becomes 21) with ‘% adult eclosion’.

Table 2.1: Summary of Bactrocera tryoni off-spring performance in five different

citrus fruits.

Citrus type

No. of replicates

Mean number of eggs laid / fruit

Total pupae recovered

% pupal recovery based on estimated initial eggs laid

Adult eclosion Final estimated percent production from egg to adult

Male

Female

Total % adult eclosion

Murcott mandarin

9 96 389 21% 187 151 338 87% 18.3%

Navel orange

9 33 63 6% 20 17 37 59% 3.5%

Lemon 15

29 19 3% 3 5 8 42% 1.3%

Valencia orange

10

32 0 0% 0 0 0 0 0.0%

Grapefruit

9 121 50 2% 19 23 42 84% 1.7%

Page 67: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

43

2.4 DISCUSSION

Preference and performance across citrus types

Bactrocera tryoni showed clear oviposition preference rankings among the tested

citrus. In both choice and no-choice situations B. tryoni females took less time to

first visit Murcott than other fruits, with lemon generally being the fruit to which

females most slowly responded. Again in both choice and no-choice situations, B.

tryoni showed consistently higher oviposition preference for Murcott and grapefruits

and lower oviposition preference for lemon and Navel (Figs. 2.3 & 2.4). Murcott

and grapefruit also received larger clutch sizes and so, along with the greater number

of oviposition events, consequently received greater total egg numbers than other

fruit. In contrast, lemons were infrequently oviposited into and received small egg

clutches, resulting in an overall low usage pattern by B. tryoni. Regardless of initial

oviposition level, off-spring survival was low to very low in all citrus types. The

highest pupal recovery was around 20% from Murcott and 0-6% for the other four

fruit types (Table 2.1). This is in comparison to 97% pupal recovery of C. capitata

in orange (Krainacker et al., 1987; Staub et al., 2008) and 65% adult recovery of A.

ludens in grapefruit (Leyva et al., 1991), but is comparable with an 11% pupal

recovery of A. suspensa in grapefruit (Greany et al., 1983).

Host preference ranking for citrus fruits has been demonstrated in other polyphagous

fruit flies such as C. capitata (Staub et al., 2008; Papachristos et al., 2009) and

Anastrepha species (Greany & Szentesi 1979; Leyva et al., 1991; Green et al., 1993;

Raga et al., 2004). For example, consistent oviposition preference was shown by A.

ludens to grapefruit (Eskafi 1988; Leyva et al., 1991; Aluja et al., 2003; Mangan et

al., 2011) and by C. capitata to orange varieties (Levinson et al., 1990; Staub et al.,

2008). Moreover, lemon is an unpreferred citrus type for both C. capitata (Spitler et

al., 1984; Zucoloto, 1993; Staub et al., 2008; Papachristos & Papadopoulos, 2009)

and A. suspensa (Greany et al., 1983). Such consistent preference towards certain

hosts by fruit flies could occur due to both host physical (Papaj et al., 1989; Nufio et

al., 2000; Balagawi, 2005) and chemical (Fitt,1984; Levinson et al., 1990)

properties.

Page 68: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

44

Factors explaining host use

While sugar is an oviposition stimulant for B. tryoni (Eisemann & Rice, 1985), as

well as other fruit fly species (Rattanapun et al., 2009), there was no significant

correlation between juice sugar content and oviposition in the current study. This

may be because B. tryoni’s ovipositor does not reach the sugar rich fruit pulp due to

thickness of citrus peel compared to many other B. tryoni hosts (e.g. stone-fruit and

pome-fruit), but this would need to be tested. Alternatively, oviposition deterrents

present in citrus peel (e.g. naringin, 5-7 dymethoxy cumarin, linalool) (Szentesi et

al., 1979; Greany et al., 1983; Mangan et al., 2011), may reduce the both the number

of oviposition events and clutch size (Tanaka, 1965; Levinson et al., 1990; Tania et

al., 2004), and this also needs to be tested for B. tryoni. Peel toughness, combined

across all fruit, was negatively correlated with oviposition number and total eggs

laid. Tough skinned lemons were least preferred by B. tryoni, while preference was

shown for the relatively soft skinned Murcott and grapefruit were more highly

preferred. Peel physical and chemical factors, as well as fly ovipositor

characteristics are all known to influence fruit fly oviposition behaviour (Aluja &

Mangan, 2008). However these factors are poorly researched for B. tryoni (Clarke et

al, 2011a) and more work, particularly within the citrus context, is clearly needed.

Citrus as a B. tryoni host

The present study demonstrates that oviposition alone is not a good reflection of the

true host status of citrus to B. tryoni. Overall fly production was less than 20%, and

generally less than 4%, in all the tested citrus types, even though initial egg load was

quite high in some fruits (Table 2.1). This indicates that offspring survival was very

poor. Immature fruit fly survival in citrus has been shown to be highly affected by

the peel essential oil (Friend, 1957; Greany et al., 1983; Salvatore et al., 2004;

Papachristos et al., 2009), with appropriate egg positioning within the oil rich

flavedo layer crucial for larval survival (Papachristos et al., 2008). The importance

of precise egg placement was demonstrated in this study by the results of artificial

inoculation versus natural inoculation. Pupal recovery was higher in naturally

infested fruit, possibly because the fly ovipositor may detect the peel chemicals and

so lay eggs in lower risk areas (e.g. away from oil cells) (Aluja & Mangan, 2008;

Mangan et al., 2011), something which cannot be done when artificially inoculating

fruit with eggs. These results suggest it is worthwhile further investigating B. tryoni

Page 69: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

45

egg positioning within citrus peel and, as previously recognised by Friend (1957),

better quantifying the impact of peel essential oil on B. tryoni larval survival.

Citrus peel properties alone are not the only fruit factor influencing offspring

survival in B. tryoni. For Navel oranges and Eureka lemons, adult emergence from

the pupal stage was three-quarters to one-half of that reported for Murcotts and

grapefruit (Table 2.1). This suggests that for those larvae which did survive to

pupation, some part of the diet was either toxic, or at least limiting, to further

development. A similar result was reported by Rattanpun et al. (2010), who found

adult emergence from pupae which had developed from mature green mango was

only half of that of pupae originating from fully ripe mango. Potential limits in

larval diet also appear to flow on to the subsequent adults, with for example no eggs

collected from the 23 female flies reared from grapefruit.

While a laboratory based study, the results presented here have important

implications for field management and market access. I can, for example,

hypothesise that Murcott would be a preferred host in the field and may be capable

of producing potentially damaging levels of flies if left unmanaged. In contrast the

other four citrus types are poor oviposition hosts and/or unsuitable for offspring

survival. The fact that any adult flies which do emerge from at least some of these

hosts may be physiologically unable to develop eggs is worth retesting within the

context of market access negotiations. Having made these comments, it is important

to add the caveat that the results of laboratory based cage-experiments can vary in

field situations (Mangan et al., 2011) and this always needs to be kept in mind when

interpreting results. For example, Murcotts ripen in the spring when the climate is

favourable to flies (Fletcher, 1987) and populations are increasing (Muthuthantri et

al., 2010), so both the host fruit itself and the environment will likely enhance the

chances of the fly using the fruit. On the other hand, Navels ripen in winter, a period

climatically unsuitably for B. tryoni, and so field utilisation will again be modified

by the host/environment interaction, but this time negatively. The issue of picked

versus unpicked fruit should also be considered. This is an issue generally ignored

in all fruit fly host utilisation studies, including those presented here, where only

harvested fruit are used. However, for apples at least, Bower (1977) has

demonstrated significantly different host performance outcomes depending on

Page 70: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

46

whether fruit was on-plant or off-plant and such comparisons should be more widely

made. The stage of ripening, from immature through to over-mature is also known

to impact on both adult fruit fly preference and larval performance (Greany. 1985;

Rattanapun et al., 2009) and this needs to be pursued for B. tryoni. Regardless of

these caveats, the consistent theme of the results of this paper is that the commercial

citrus types tested are poor hosts of B. tryoni.

Thesis progress

This chapter demonstrated a significant oviposition preference ranking among citrus

types by the polyphagous B. tryoni. Further, very poor egg and larval survival

occurred in all citrus types. As discussed, several other tephritid species have also

shown poor host utilisation of citrus and this work leads me to postulate that poor B.

tryoni larval performance in citrus could be due to peel physical and chemical

characteristics. To understand how citrus peel properties influence B. tryoni

immature performance, it is necessary to know the exact positioning of B. tryoni

eggs laid into citrus peel, as well as the degree of variation of peel physical

characters among citrus types. Therefore, in the next chapter (Chapter 3), I

investigated the peel physical characteristics of the same five citrus types I used in

this chapter. I investigated the relative positions of eggs laid by the fly into the

different citrus types, the microphysical environment of the eggs, and how peel

physical attributes influence B. tryoni oviposition depth and larval survival. In the

chapter following that (Chapter 4) I investigated the peel chemical attributes.

Page 71: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

47

CHAPTER 3

Effect of Citrus Peel Physical Properties on

Bactrocera tryoni Oviposition Behaviour

Page 72: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

48

3.1 INTRODUCTION

In the previous chapter I demonstrated poor to very poor B. tryoni offspring

performance in different citrus types. This was not correlated with the fruit variables

of size, brix and peel toughness and so there is need for more detailed work to

identify the specific fruit properties that influence B. tryoni performance in different

citrus. In most citrus fruits eggs are deposited into fruit peel and peel structural and

mechanical properties are considered important factors influencing egg hatching and

larval development (Jones, 1989). Given this, the current chapter investigates

differences in peel morphology between my target citrus species and identified

where B. tryoni eggs are positioned with respect to peel components. The next

chapter explores the second important component of peel, the peel essential oils, and

the two chapters combine to give an in-depth analysis of citrus peel and B. tryoni

egg/larval performance.

Citrus peel consists of several layers that impose different mechanical and chemical

constraints to insects. As illustrated in Fig. 3.1, citrus peel consists first of an outer

cuticle and parenchyma cell layer. The flavedo layer, located just below the cuticle

and parenchyma layer, is a coloured layer that contains the majority of the oil glands

in the peel: to the layman the first three layers are the citrus ‘zest’. Below the

flavedo is the light coloured, spongy, albedo layer. The albedo and the skin between

carpals (segments) contain very few oil glands (Ladaniya, 2007). The pulp contains

the nutritionally valuable part of the fruit and is never toxic in Citrus, although it

may be highly acidic.

Page 73: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

49

Figure 3.1: Diagrammatic cross section of the peel and pulp of a ‘typical’ citrus

fruit. From the outside in the layers are: (C) cuticle; (P) parenchyma cells; (F)

flavedo; (A) albedo, (O) oil gland and (Ca) carpel or pulp.

Page 74: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

50

The first barrier encountered by a female fruit fly when she attempts to lay eggs into

citrus is the mechanical resistance of the citrus peel. Thick fruit cuticle and small

diameter epidermal cells increases the ovipositor pressure required to penetrate the

host (Jones, 1989). In addition to peel toughness, peel elasticity is also an obstacle

for fruit fly ovipositor penetration (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Birke et al., 2006).

Many citrus species and varieties have relatively thick peel (e.g. 2-20mm range),

which makes it difficult for many fruit fly species to place their eggs into the

nutritious, but deeper pulp (Aluja et al., 2003; Staub et al., 2008). Peel mechanical

resistance further reduces the possibility of flies depositing eggs in the deeper part of

the peel. Thus many fruit fly species lay eggs in flavedo or albedo layers of the peel

(Fig 3.1c & b), rather than into or adjacent to the nutritional and non-toxic pulp (Fig.

3.1a) (Eskafi, 1988; Greany et al., 1983; Mangan et al., 2011; Papachristos &

Papadopoulos, 2009).

Fruit fly egg placement within citrus peel is considered a critical feature influencing

offspring performance (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et

al., 2008). Egg deposition into the oil rich flavedo layer can impose both physical

and chemical constraints on egg and larval development. Mechanically, emerging

larvae may face difficulty in passing through the wall of the egg chamber, a cavity

within the peel made by the ovipositing adult into which eggs are placed (Back &

Pemberton, 1915), as it may become thick and woody. Mechanical resistance also

comes from the albedo layer when larvae migrate to the pulp. Chemically, when

larvae try to reach the nutritious pulp they may rupture oil glands, releasing the

essential oils that are deleterious to the first instar larvae of many fruit flies (Back &

Pemberton, 1915). These constraints are such that Papachristos et al. (2008)

reported that Ceratitis capitata first instar larval survival is almost zero if eggs are

placed in the flavedo. In contrast, if eggs are laid into oil-less albedo or pulp, larval

survival is higher in both C. capitata (Papachristos et al., 2008) and Anastrepha

suspensa (Greany et al., 1983). Irrespective of the location within the peel where the

female lays her eggs, the larvae still have to migrate to the pulp, as this is the

nutritious part of the fruit. In thicker peeled citrus larvae will take more time to

reach the pulp, increasing the physical and chemical challenges they face (Leyva et

al., 1991). Back & Pemberton (1915) reported lower fruit fly larval mortality in thin

and loosely attached peel citrus types (Chinese orange, sour orange, tangerine), than

Page 75: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

51

in sweet orange types with tighter, thicker peels, as larvae faced less physical

resistance from the peel in reaching the pulp.

Some workers have argued that peel mechanical characteristics are the dominant

factors influencing larval survival and oviposition depth behaviour of fruit flies and

should be a part of any study of fruit fly host use (Greany, 1985; Jones, 1989).

Given this, and in the context of understanding the processes influencing differential

host utilisation of citrus by B. tryoni, the aims of this chapter are:

- To investigate where B. tryoni lays its eggs in the peel of different citrus

species / varieties, to investigate the environment surrounding the egg

chamber and

- To investigate peel physical characteristics flavedo thickness, albedo

thickness, oil gland size, oil gland density in different citrus types and how

these differences may affect B. tryoni oviposition depth.

As for the previous chapter, the five citrus types observed here are Murcott

mandarin, Navel orange, Eureka lemon, Valencia orange and yellow grapefruit. This

chapter deals only with the mechanical aspects of the peel, the following chapter

(Chapter 4) deals with the oil chemistry of the peel.

3.2 METHODS

3.2.1 Fruit material

The peel of five citrus types (Murcott mandarin, Navel orange, Eureka lemon,

Valencia orange and yellow grapefruit) were examined using stereo-digital and light

microscopy to quantify their physical properties. Fresh fruits were purchased from a

commercial supplier, washed with tap water, dried and then stored in refrigeration.

Peel properties were determined by examining nine Murcott mandarins, eleven

Navel oranges, twelve Eureka lemons, four Valencia oranges and twelve yellow

grapefruits. The lower numbers of Valencia and Murcott were due to their seasonal

scarcity at the time of the experiments. For each Citrus type the following peel

measurements were taken: thickness (mm) of the flavedo and albedo layers and total

peel thickness (cuticle + flavedo + albedo); mean oil gland size (µm); mean distance

between two consecutive oil glands (µm); and mean gland density.

Page 76: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

52

To study the positioning of B. tryoni eggs in the peel, 10 to 14 days old mated fifty

female B. tryoni flies were exposed to fresh fruit of the five citrus types for one hour

in a 30cm × 30cm × 30cm cage. Each time a fly oviposited, the oviposition depth

site was marked with a pen. Two Murcott, four Navel, four Valencia, five lemons

and three grapefruit were exposed in this way. Infested fruits were kept in an

incubator at 14°C until dissection, which increased the visibility of the mark caused

by oviposition. Focusing on oviposition sites, the following measurements were

taken for each citrus type: depth of oviposition into the peel; and size of the egg

chamber.

3.2.2 Tissue preparation for digital stereo microscope examination

An approximately 1cm long, 2mm wide peel section was removed from a chosen

citrus type using a scalpel: the number of sections examined for each fruit type is

given in Table 3.1. Peel sections were taken from anywhere on the fruit except for

the areas immediately adjacent to either the top (i.e. stem end) or bottom of the fruit.

These thick (i.e. hand-cut) cross-sectional peel sections were examined under a

digital stereo-microscope (AM311 Dino-Lite Handheld microscope) and digital

photographs of the cross sectional view were taken at 30-65 x magnification.

These images were used to measure flavedo thickness, albedo thickness and total

peel thickness (cuticle + flavedo + albedo) of each citrus type. Each image was

taken as one replicate for the corresponding citrus type. The width of flavedo layer

was taken by drawing a line perpendicular to the cuticle and extending it to upper

albedo layer (Fig. 3.2 -F). Then the same line was extended until the end of the

albedo at a perpendicular angle to upper albedo layer and this length was taken as

albedo thickness (Fig. 3.2 -A). The total thickness was automatically calculated

using dinocapture software associated with the stereo micrograph.

Page 77: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

53

Figure 3.2: Digital stereo microscopic image of citrus peel tissue showing the

measurements made for (F) flavedo thickness and (A) albedo thickness.

Table 3.1: Number of citrus peel replicates made in the current study. “Infested”

means oviposited into by Bactrocera tryoni.

Citrus type No. of

uninfested tissue

sections (digital

stereo

microscope)

No. of

uninfested

tissue slides

(Light

microscope)

No. of infested

tissue sections

(digital stereo

microscope)

No. of infested

tissue slides

(Light

microscope)

Murcott

mandarin

12 12 20 10

Navel orange 27 21 29 22

Eureka lemon 46 32 7 5

Valencia orange 24 14 13 5

Yellow grapefruit 34 21 9 8

Page 78: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

54

Infested fruits each contained multiple oviposition depth sites and each of these was

taken as an independent replicate when measuring characters related to oviposition

depth. Measurement of oviposition depth site characteristics was achieved by first

removing the general area of peel where an oviposition site had been marked. The

surface of this section was then observed under the stereo-microscope to identify the

exact ovipositor entry point. Once the oviposition depth site was identified, a single

cut was made to bisect the oviposition depth mark. The resulting cross sections were

then observed under the digital stereo-microscope. If eggs were present in the cross

section that peel section was taken for further examination; the number of infested

peel samples obtained from each citrus type is given in Table 3.1. Peel sections with

identified egg chambers and eggs were photographed using digital stereo microscopy

and the characteristics of the injury made by the fruit fly ovipositor examined. When

the path of the ovipositor was not visible, the perpendicular length from the top of

the egg chamber to the outside of the peel was measured and this was assumed to be

the oviposition depth. The vertical length of the egg chamber was also recorded

(Fig. 3.3).

Page 79: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

55

Figure 3.3 Digital stereo microscopic image of citrus peel tissue following

ovipoistion by Bactrocera tryoni showing the oviposition depth (OD) and the egg

chamber with eggs (EC). [NB: the contrast and brightness of this image have been

modified for illustrative purposes].

3.2.3 Tissue preparation for light microscopy

All the peel samples observed under the digital stereo microscope were fixed in

formalin acetic acid (FAA) immediately after examination and initial data recording.

These sections were then processed for thin section cutting and examination using

light microscopy (LM). Samples were first dehydrated in a graded ethanol series

(Table 3.2) and embedded in paraffin. Paraffin embedded peel samples were thin

sectioned (15µm) using a rotary microtome (LKB – Bromma, rotary microtome).

Thin tissue sections were mounted onto Super Frost positively charged slides and the

slides were kept in the oven at 37°C for 24 hours to dry. The tissue slides were de-

paraffinised followed by rehydration and then stained with toluiodine blue,

dehydrated and covered with glass cover slip (Table 3.2). During sectioning and

Page 80: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

56

chemical processing, some tissue slides became unusable and the final numbers of

peel samples mounted for LM are presented in Table 3.1.

Table 3.2: Tissue preparation steps for citrus peel sections slide mounted for light

microscopy.

Tissue dehydration (D1) and paraffinization

Time Temperature (°C)

Tissue dehydration 70% Ethanol 1hr 37 90% Ethanol 1hr 37 90% Ethanol 1hr 37 100% Ethanol 45min 37 100% Ethanol 45min 37 100% Ethanol 45min 37 100% Ethanol 45min 37 Xylene 45min 37 Xylene 45min 37 Xylene 45min 37 Wax 30min 60 Wax 30min 60 Wax 30min 60 Wax 30min 60 pump in/out 24min Embedding in paraffin De-paraffinization Xylene 1 10 minutes Room Temperature Xylene 2 10 minutes Room Temperature Rehydration Xylene: Absolute ethanol (1:1) 5 min Room Temperature Absolute ethanol 1 5 minutes Room Temperature Absolute ethanol 2 5 minutes Room Temperature 90% ethanol 5 minutes Room Temperature 70% ethanol 5 minutes Room Temperature 50% ethanol 5 minutes Room Temperature DI water for more than 5 minutes Room Temperature Staining

Toluidine Blue 5 minutes

Room Temperature Dehydration 90% ethanol 2 minutes Room Temperature Absolute ethanol 2 minutes Room Temperature Absolute ethanol 2 minute Room Temperature Xylene 1 2 minutes Room Temperature Xylene 2 minimum of 2 minutes Room Temperature

Page 81: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

57

3.2.4 Data from light microscopy

Material analysed by light microscopy were clear tissue sections. These sections

were photographed under 4× magnification and the images analysed using Basic

Image Analysis (NIS Element), with the images calibrated to a micrometer. Oil

gland size was measured by taking the distance from top to bottom of the gland.

Depending on the visible oil glands present, 1-3 glands/slide were measured with

total N Murcott = 11, N Navel = 23, N lemon = 32, N Valencia = 23, N grapefruit = 26. Mean

distances between oil glands were measured by taking the distance between two

neighbouring glands in a sample (N Murcott = 10, N Navel = 17, N lemon = 19, N Valencia =

20, N grapefruit = 15). Mean gland density was obtained from the images taken using

the digital stereo microscope. Using the imaging software, a square was drawn

which enclosed all the oil glands, flavedo and albedo in the tissue slide. The number

of oil glands in that square was counted and then divided by the square area to

generate the gland density per cm2 of peel (N Murcott = 15, N Navel = 18, N lemon = 16, N

Valencia = 9, N grapefruit = 14). Mean oviposition depth (N Murcott = 20, NNavel = 23,

Nlemon = 5, NValencia = 8, N grapefruit = 8) and mean egg chamber height (NMurcott = 20,

NNavel = 23, Nlemon = 5, NValencia = 8, N grapefruit = 8) were measured from the stereo

digital microscopic images as stained slides did not show clear ovipositor path. Peel

toughness, fruit size and brix value of the five citrus types obtained for Chapter 2

were also utilized for this chapter’s data analysis.

Data presentation /analysis

The complexity of the data generated required a number of different presentation and

analytical approaches: these are presented in dot point as follows.

1. Mean flavedo thickness, albedo thickness and total peel thickness data were

compared in one - way ANOVA and pair - wise comparisons were performed

using the LSD test. Similarly, mean oil gland size and mean oil gland

distance between two consecutive oil glands across five citrus types were

compared using one way ANOVA test and an LSD post hoc test. When

multiple measurements (i.e. oil gland size and oil gland distance) were taken

per slide these data were averaged and included in the analysis as one data

point.

Page 82: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

58

2. Mean oil gland density were compared across five citrus types using one -

way ANOVA and pair - wise comparisons were done using LSD test.

3. Differences in mean B. tryoni oviposition depth across five citrus types were

compared using one - way ANOVA test and post hoc pair wise - comparisons

done by LSD test.

4. Pearson correlation analysis was done to test for significant correlations

between oviposition depth and oil gland size, oil gland distance, oil gland

density, flavedo thickness, peel toughness, fruit size and brix value.

5. Multiple regression analysis was done to test the significance of the effect of

peel toughness and gland density against oviposition depth.

6. Because existing literature places such importance on fruit fly egg survival

being dependent on where the eggs are placed with respect to the oil-rich

flavedo layer, a data summary presentation was made to compare mean

oviposition depth against flavedo thickness for the five citrus.

Note: All statistical analysis was done after testing if the statistical test

assumptions are valid.

3.3 RESULTS

3.3.1 Physical peel properties

The five citrus types differed significantly in all peel properties measured. The

thickness of flavedo differed significantly across the five citrus types (F 35,4 = 8.97,

p<0.05), with the flavedo thickest but not significantly different from each other in

Navel and Valencia oranges, thinnest in Murcott and grapefruit, with lemon

intermediate (Fig 3.4a). Albedo thickness also significantly differed across the citrus

types (F 35, 4 = 11.7, p <0.05) and was thickest in grapefruit and thinnest in Murcott

and Valencia (Fig. 3.4b). Across the five fruits, grapefruit had the thickest peel

overall, with Murcott and Valencia the thinnest (F 4, 35 = 9.82, p < 0.05) (Fig. 3.4c).

Mean oil gland size differed significantly across the five citrus types (F 4, 29 = 5.006,

p = 0.003), with post - hoc tests demonstrating that the oil glands of Valencia

oranges were significantly larger than the other four citrus types, which were not

significantly different from each other (Fig 3.5a). The distance between

neighbouring oil glands was significantly different across the citrus types (F 4, 29 =

Page 83: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

59

6.288, p = 0.001). Distance was greatest and not significantly different between

Murcott, lemon and grapefruit, with Navel and Valencia having the mean shortest

inter-gland distances (Fig. 3.5b). Finally oil gland density also differed significantly

among the citrus (F 67, 4 = 18.24, P < 0.05), with highest oil gland density in Navel

and Valencia, with lemon, Murcott and grapefruit having lower and not significantly

different oil gland densities from each other (Fig 3.5c).

Typical cross-sections from the flavedo and albedo of each the five citrus are

illustrated in Fig. 3.6.

Page 84: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

60

a.

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Flav

edo

thic

knes

s (m

m)

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Albe

do th

ickn

ess

(mm

)

0

2

4

6

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Peel

thic

knes

s (m

m)

0

2

4

6

8

a

b

c

b

ac

a

b b

ab

c

a

b b ab

c

b.

c.

Figure 3.4: Mean (±SE) thickness of the (a) peel flavedo, (b) peel albedo and (c)

total peel (cuticle + flavedo + albedo) of five citrus types.

Page 85: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

61

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Oil

glan

d si

ze (

m)

600

800

1000

1200

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Oil

glan

d di

stan

ce (

m)

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Oil

glan

d de

nsity

(gla

nds/

cm2 )

0

10

20

30

40

50

a a a

b

a

a

b

a

b

a

b.

c.

a

b

a

b

a

a.

Figure 3.5: Mean (±SE) (a) oil gland size, (b) distance between neighbouring oil

glands and (c) oil gland density in the peel of five citrus types

Page 86: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

62

Murcott flavedo Murcott albedo

Navel flavedo Navel albedo Figure 3.6: Light micrograph of oil glands in the peel of five citrus types. Aldehyde

fixed longitudinal, Toluiodine stained sections (15µm). (O). Oil gland, (O.I)

Immature oil gland, (C) Cuticle. Bar represent 1000µm.

Page 87: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

63

Eureka flavedo Eureka albedo

Valencia flavedo Valencia albedo Figure 3.6 (continued): Light micrograph of oil glands in the peel of five citrus

types. Aldehyde fixed longitudinal, Toluiodine stained sections (15µm) . (O). Oil

gland, (O.I) Immature oil gland, (C) Cuticle. Bar represent 1000µm.

Page 88: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

64

Grapefruit flavedo Grapefruit albedo

Figure 3.6 (continued): Light micrograph of oil glands in the peel of five citrus

types. Aldehyde fixed longitudinal, Toluiodine stained sections (15µm) . (O). Oil

gland, (O.I) Immature oil gland, (C) Cuticle. Bar represent 1000µm.

3.3.2 Location of B. tryoni eggs in the citrus peel

Typical citrus peel cross – sections (both thick sections and thin sections) showing

the eggs and/or egg chamber for each of the specimens from the flavedo and albedo

of each the five citrus types are illustrated in Fig. 3.7. It should be noted that both

digital stereo microscopy and light microscopy fail to clearly detect the path

ovipositor in nearly all preparations. Mean oviposition depth into peel differed

significantly across the five citrus types (F 51,4 = 7.04, p < 0.05). Oviposition depth

in Murcott was significantly deeper than all other citrus types, and was shallowest in

lemon and grapefruit, with the other fruits intermediate between those (Fig. 3.8a).

The height of the egg chamber was not significantly different between by citrus

types (F 13, 9 = 0.312, p = 0.86) (Fig 3.8b). When the oviposition depth was

compared to flavedo thickness, it was found that only for Murcott could B. tryoni

deposit eggs beyond the oil rich flavedo layer: in all other fruits oviposition depth is

lesser than flavedo thickness (Fig. 3.8c).

There was a significant negative correlation between oviposition depth and oil gland

density (r = - 0.38, p = 0.01) and peel toughness (r = - 0.436, p = 0.003) (Fig. 3.7).

However oviposition depth was not significantly correlated with oil gland distance (r

Page 89: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

65

= 0.074, p = 0.612), flavedo thickness (r = -0. 02, p = 0.87), fruit size (r = 0.09, p =

0.54) or brix value (r = 0.27, p = 0.07). The multiple regression function between

oviposition depth against peel toughness and gland density was significant (F(2,40) =

5.12, p = 0.01) and R2 = 0.204. The slope of the relationship between oviposition

depth and peel toughness was -0.42 (p = 0.005) and between oviposition depth and

gland density was -0.12 (p = 0.43).

Page 90: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

66

Gland density (glands/cm2)

0 10 20 30 40 50

Ovi

posi

tion

dept

h (m

m)

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5a.

Peel toughness force (g)

0 200 400 600 800

Ovi

posi

tion

dept

h (m

m)

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5b.

Figure 3.7: Relationship between peel toughness and oil gland density of citrus with

oviposition depth (a) peel oil gland density vs. oviposition depth (b) peel toughness

vs. oviposition depth.

Page 91: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

67

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Ovi

posi

tion

dept

h (m

m)

0.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.41.6

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Egg

cha

mbe

r hei

ght (

mm

)

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon ValenciaGrapefruit

Flav

edo

leng

th -

ovip

ositi

on d

epth

(mm

)

-0.5

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

a

b

c

dbdc

b.

a a

a

a

c.

a.

a

Figure 3.8: Bactrocera tryoni oviposition depth into five citrus types illustrating (a)

mean (±SE) oviposition depth (b) egg chamber height and (c) relationship between

oviposition depth and thickness of the flavedo layer. In (c) a positive measurement

means eggs are laid into the flavedo layer, a negative measurement (i.e. for Murcott)

means eggs bypass the flavedo and are laid into the albedo layer.

Page 92: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

68

Murcott

Navel

Lemon

Page 93: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

69

Valencia

Grapefruit Figure 3.9: Longitudinal sections of stereo digital micrograph (SD) and aldehyde

fixed longitudinal, tolu iodine stained sections (15µm) of light micrograph (LM) of

B. tryoni oviposited peel sections of five citrus types. (O) oil gland, (C ) cuticle, (F)

Flavedo, (A) Albedo, (EC) Egg chamber

Page 94: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

70

3.4 DISCUSSION

Peel morphology and B. tryoni oviposition depth

Results showed that peel thickness, flavedo thickness and albedo thickness differed

significantly across the five citrus types. The two orange varieties, Navel and,

Valencia, had very similar peels, with their flavedo, albedo and total peel thickness

not being significantly different from each other. Bactrocera tryoni oviposition

depth also did not differ between these two citrus types. Eureka lemon had the same

total peel thickness and albedo thickness as the two oranges, but its flavedo thickness

was significantly thinner than the oranges. Interestingly, oviposition depth by female

B. tryoni into Eureka lemon was shallower than in any other citrus type. On the

other hand, the flavedo thickness of lemon was not different from yellow grapefruit,

which in turn was not significantly different to Murcott mandarin, yet the oviposition

depth into Murcott was significantly deeper than either lemon or grapefruit. Further,

oviposition depth into Valencia and grapefruit did not differ, despite flavedo

thickness and albedo thickness being significantly different between these two fruits.

These conflicting data indicate that flavedo, albedo or total peel thickness do not

explain the differences in B. tryoni oviposition depth in different citrus types.

In general, mature mean ovipositor sheath length does not differ significantly within

a fruit fly species (Birke et al., 2006). Thus differences in B. tryoni oviposition

depth in peel of five citrus types is due to a fruit factor, but most likely due to peel

properties other than simple thickness, such as peel toughness, peel elasticity, cell

compactness in peel tissue (Back & Pemberton, 1915; Jones, 1989). Peel toughness

is reported to be a main peel property influencing fruit fly oviposition depth (Birke et

al., 2006; Jones, 1989; Staub et al., 2008). The data presented in this chapter

supports this hypothesis, showing a significant negative correlation between peel

toughness and oviposition depth across the citrus types. Lemon had a significantly

tougher peel than the other fruit types and this may be the main reason why

oviposition depth was shallowest in lemon peel. Alternatively, peel toughness was

not significantly different in Murcott, Navel and Valencia, but oviposition depth was

significantly deeper in Murcott than Navel and Valencia. This indicates that there

may be other factors affecting fly oviposition depth besides peel toughness.

Page 95: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

71

Several fruit fly workers have reported that peel chemicals may influence fruit fly

oviposition depth (Eisemann, 1989; Leyva et al., 1991). Again my results support

this, showing a significant negative correlation between gland density and

oviposition depth. However, with respect to the many other fruit properties

influencing on oviposition depth, effect of gland density is not significant.

Nevertheless the data presented in this chapter showed that Navel and Valencia have

higher gland densities than Murcott, indicating that Navel and Valencia have higher

oil concentrations in the peel than Murcott. The mechanism behind this relationship

is presumed to be the ovipositor sensilla, which can detect peel chemicals during

insertion of the ovipositor into a fruit (Eisemann, 1989; Jones, 1989). If the

ovipositor sensilla detect these peel oil chemicals, the fly may avoid or reduce the

number of eggs laid as reported for C. capitata (Bodenheimer, 1951; Levinson et al.,

2003) and A. obliqua (Mangan et al., 2011). Thus, there could be some indirect

effect from gland density/ oil concentration on citrus peel with high gland density

(e.g. Navel and Valencia oranges) to receive shallower oviposition depth than in

Murcott mandarin.

B. tryoni oviposition depth and immature survival and development

Due to reasons discussed above, B. tryoni was found to be able to oviposit past the

flavedo layer only in Murcott out of the five citrus types tested (Fig.3.8). This

means that for the other citrus types B. tryoni eggs are being laid in oil rich flavedo

layer and the larvae have to move longer distances to reach the nutritious pulp.

While so doing they have to overcome the chemical resistance of the flavedo and the

mechanical resistance of the albedo, which can increase mortality and delay

development of larvae (Leyva et al., 1991).

The oil concentrated in the flavedo is reported to be an unfavourable environment for

many tephritid immature stages and the deposition of eggs in the flavedo increases

larval mortality (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Leyva et al., 1991; Papachristos et al.,

2008). If citrus peel chemicals have significant negative effects on B. tryoni

immature stages, then it might be assumed larval mortality will be higher in those

fruits where the eggs are deposited in the flavedo (i.e. lemon, Navel, Valencia and

grapefruit), than when eggs are deposited in the albedo (i.e. Murcott). Evidence for

this pattern is demonstrated in the results of (Chapter 2). However, before was to be

Page 96: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

72

assumed the cause of differential performance of B. tryoni in citrus hosts, negative

effects of the citrus peel oils needs to be shown. There is no published data on the

effect of citrus peel oil chemicals on the immature stages of B. tryoni, even if there

are for other tephritids (Eskafi, 1988; Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et al., 2008).

This then is the focus of the next chapter, in which I explore how citrus peel

chemicals affect B. tryoni immature stages.

Page 97: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

73

CHAPTER 4

Effect of Citrus Peel Volatiles on Bactrocera tryoni

Larval Survival

Page 98: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

74

4.1 INTRODUCTION

It was demonstrated in Chapter 3 that citrus peel physical characters, such as

toughness/cellular compactness, thickness and oil gland density, influenced the depth

of ovipositor penetration by female Bactrocera tryoni. These peel physical

characteristics significantly affected the region of the peel in which eggs were

inserted during oviposition by Bactrocera tryoni for five citrus types. With the eggs

placed in different region of the citrus peel (e.g. flavedo vs. albedo), the emergent

first instars may encounter different chemical environments when they emerge

because of the concentration of the oil glands in the flavedo. In this chapter I

explore how the citrus oils, both crude blends and individual oil components, affect

the eclosion and survival B. tryoni larvae.

As for many insects (Al Dakhil & Morsy, 1999; Hafeez et al., 2011) and pathogens

(Fuselli et al., 2008; Viuda-Martos et al., 2008), citrus peel essential oils have a

significant effect on the eggs and larvae of fruit flies as they develop inside the fruit

(Aluja et al., 2003; Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et al., 2008). As soon as a first

instar larva emerges from its egg and becomes mobile in the peel, it has the potential

to rupture oil glands and be exposed to the concentrated peel oils (Back &

Pemberton, 1915). The chemical microenvironment will differ depending on citrus

species (Giovanni, 2010), peel depth (i.e. flavedo/albedo/pulp) (Papachristos &

Papadopoulos, 2009) and maturity of the fruit (Greany et al., 1983), but in general

citrus peel oil has significant negative effects on tephritid larval survival and

development (Papachristos et al., 2009).

Papachristos (2009) reported that first instar C. capitata have zero percent survival

when exposed to concentrated orange and lemon peel oil, while Greany (1983)

similarly reported that A. suspensa larvae have zero percent survival in lemon and

only very low survival in orange and grapefruit peel oil. The level of toxicity does,

however, differ among citrus species and varieties (Papachristos et al., 2009).

Papachristos (2009) observed that at lower concentrations lemon oil is less toxic than

orange oil to C. capitata larvae, while Greany (1983) reported that grapefruit oil is

less toxic than lemon oil to A. suspensa. Such differences in oil toxicity between

different citrus types has also been demonstrated for other insects, such as mosquito

larvae (Hafeez et al., 2011) and fungal pathogens (Viuda-Martos et al., 2008). For

Page 99: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

75

fruit flies it is considered that the toxicity of different citrus types is due to the

different quantities and compositions of citrus peel oil (Papachristos et al., 2009).

Quantity of peel oil can vary among citrus types due to peel physical factors such as

oil gland size and oil gland density (Bodenheimer, 1951); while the concentration of

oil fractions present in peel oil varies with citrus genotype, soil, season of fruiting,

and fruit ripening (Giovanni, 2010; Hosni et al., 2010) (Table 4.1).

Table 4.1: Oil fraction from different citrus types (Giovanni, 2010; Papachristos et

al., 2009; Shaw, 1979).

Oil

fraction

concent

ration

Bitter

orange

Grape-

fruit

Percian

lime

Mandari

-n

Tanger

-in

Sweet

orange

Bergmot

oil

Lemon

P Cymene

0.02 0.33 0.12-1.28 0.01 trace-o.06

.01-3.61 .02-.14 0.02

Limonene

91-94 83 48 65-77 94 91-96 24-54 59-76

Mycene

1.6-3.1 1.37-3.67

1.26 1.57-2.27

1.86 1.71-2.04 .36-2.33 1.28-1.75

α - pinene

0.29-0.89

0.38 2.46 1.75-5,24

0.53 0.36-1.4 .7-1.84 1.47-2.13

β - pinene

0.29-0.89

0.02-0.05

21.1 1.15-2.44

0.03 tr-.11 4.11-10.6

5.96-16.5

Sabinene

0.12-0.45

0.42-1.08

3.06 .1-.59 0.29 .24-.8 .72-1.69 1.12-2.59

γ - Terpinene

traces 0.01-0.12

8.12 12.97-22.75

traces 0.33 1.15-11.38

7.95-9.64

Neral

Not

found

0.03-0.05

1.56 Traces

- 0.03

Trace

s -

0.07

Traces -

0.018

0.04-

0.36

0.57-

1.98

Page 100: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

76

Citrus essential oils containing high levels of oxygenated monoterpenes (e.g. citral,

linalool) are highly toxic to tephritid larvae (Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et al.,

2009; Salvatore et al., 2004), particularly in comparison to oils with high levels of

monoterpene hydrocarbons (limonene, pinene) which have a lower toxicity

(Papachristos et al., 2009). However, the oxygenated monoterpene concentrations in

citrus oil reduce as fruit ripens and after harvest, while hydrocarbon monoterpene

concentrations only slightly reduce with ripening and storage (Greany et al., 1983;

Salvatore et al., 2004). Because of these changes in the essential oil fractions during

ripening and after harvest, many citrus peel oil extracts have very low concentrations

of oxygenated monoterpenes as the fruit is harvested and stored before the oils are

extracted. Thus while the oxygenated monoterpenes are known to be highly toxic to

tephritids, in some studies it is the monoterpene hydrocarbons which are considered

primarily responsible for larval mortality, e.g. for C. capitata larvae in citrus oil

(Papachristos et al., 2009).

The published literature on survival and development of B. tryoni in citrus fruit, and

what factors may influence survival and development within the fruit, is lacking

(Lloyd et al., 2010). As for other tephritids, citrus peel chemicals may influence

immature B. tryoni survival and development (Friend, 1957), but this has never been

tested. Building on Chapter 3, which investigated the physical properties of citrus

fruit peel, this chapter determined the effects of different citrus peel oils and oil

fractions on B. tryoni larval survival. The aim is to better understand which fruit

factors affect production of B. tryoni from citrus fruits. More specifically, the

objectives of this chapter are to:

1) Investigate B. tryoni larval survival in diets modified with the addition of

peel essential oil extracts of five citrus types (Murcott mandarin, Navel

orange, Valencia orange, Eureka lemon and yellow grapefruit).

2) Investigate B. tryoni larval survival in diets modified with the addition of six

selected essential oil fractions, namely α-pinene β-pinene, p-cymene,

myrcene, γ-terpinene and D-limonene.

Page 101: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

77

4.2. METHODS

4.2.1 Citrus essential oil extraction

4.2.1.1 Peel preparation

Peel essential oil was extracted from five citrus types. Murcott mandarin, Navel

orange, Eureka lemon, Valencia orange and yellow grapefruit. Fresh citrus fruits

were bought from a commercial supplier, thoroughly washed with tap water, wiped

and dried at room temperature. The flavedo layer (yellow part or zest) of the peel

was then removed from the fruit and cut into approximately 1cm2 pieces. One

hundred and fifty grams of peel (the peel from approximately six fruit pieces) was

used for each extraction (Fig.4.1). Ten replicate oil extractions of each citrus type

were made.

Figure 4.1: Small peel pieces of citrus peel prepared for essential oil extraction.

4.2.1.2 Oil extraction

One hundred and fifty grams of peel was placed into a round bottom, 1000 ml flask

that was then filled with 250ml distilled water. Essential oils were obtained by

subjecting the peel to hydrodistillation using a Clevenger apparatus (Fig. 4.2) for

three hours at 100°C, with the distillate then dried over anhydrous sodium sulphate

and stored in a freezer at –20°C until used. A small portion of the oil (~15 µL) was

retained for gas chromatographic analysis.

Page 102: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

78

Figure 4.2: Clevenger apparatus set up for citrus peel oil extraction. Citrus peel was

filled in the round bottom flasks.

4.2.1.3 Chromatographic analysis

Oil samples were diluted 1 in 1000 in hexane (Sigma) before analysis. Samples

(1 µL) were analysed using a gas chromatograph (GC) (Agilent 6890 Series) coupled

to a mass spectrometer (MS) (Agilent 5975) and fitted with a silica capillary column

(Agilent, model HP5-MS, 30 m × 250 µm ID × 0.25 µm film thickness). Data were

acquired under the following GC conditions: inlet temperature, 250°C; carrier gas,

helium at 51 cm.s-1; split ratio 13:1; transfer-line temperature, 280°C; initial

temperature, 40°C; initial time, 2 min; rate, 10°C.min-1; final temperature, 260°C;

final time, 6 min. The MS was held at 280°C in the iron source with a scan rate of

4.45 scans.s-1.

Peaks that were present in blank hexane (control) samples were discarded from

analysis in test samples. Tentative identities were assigned to peaks with respect to

the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) mass spectral library.

Mass spectra of peaks from different samples with the same retention time were

compared to ensure that the compounds were indeed the same. Major peaks and

their relative area were determined.

The extraction and chromatographic analysis were carried out by Dr Andrew Hayes

of the Queensland Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Boggo Road

Page 103: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

79

EcoSciences Precinct, with the PhD candidate actively involved in the extraction

process.

4.2.2 Citrus oil feeding assay

4.2.2.1 Larval diet

Carrot media was used as the base B. tryoni larval diet (Christenson et al., 1956), to

which a different oil or oil concentration was added. The approach for testing the

effects of citrus peel oils on tephritid larvae by adding oils to a base diet is well

established in the literature (Papachristos et al., 2009; Salvatore et al., 2004). For

each treatment 3 g of carrot media was mixed with the required volume of citrus peel

essential oil with each treatment was replicated three times. The amount of oil

mixed with the diet for the first treatment of each citrus type was determined based

on the oil yield (µL/g of peel) for that citrus type (see Table 4.1). More specifically,

the oil volume mixed with 1 g carrot diet for the first treatment of each citrus type

was as same as the oil volume in 1 g of peel from the corresponding citrus type. The

carrot diet/oil mix for each of the three replicates within a treatment was made as a

single mix, before each of the 3g replicates was individually weighed, placed in

small plastic cup and labelled.

4.2.2.2 Oil concentrations used in feeding bioassays

The oil extractions were done according to the seasonal availability of each citrus

type. This meant that Navel orange, lemon and grapefruit oils were extracted in

consecutive weeks (as they were all available) and the larval feeding assays were

started with these three citrus types. Initially 11 concentration treatments were

planned for each of these three citrus types, such that there would have been the base

oil concentration (= oil yield), plus five concentration steps increasing and

decreasing from the base oil concentration. However, in preliminary experiments, it

was found that larval mortality in all citrus essential oil types was only slightly less

than 50% at the base oil concentrations and so a decision was made to focus on

increasing oil concentrations to determine lethal concentrations. Using the literature

for other tephritid species (Papachristos et al., 2009), what was thought to be a likely

upper oil concentration required to kill most larvae was then estimated, with

intermediate treatments incrementally spaced between the base oil level and the

upper oil level. However, while doing the feeding assays, it was found that even the

Page 104: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

80

highest treatments were not enough to decrease larval survival significantly. Thus

five additional treatments, at greatly increased concentrations, were done for Navel,

lemon and grapefruit oil bioassay until all extracted oil was used. The oil

concentrations used are provided in Table 4.1.

Due to their seasonal availability, the Murcott and Valencia peel oils were extracted

after the Navel, lemon and grapefruit bioassays were finished. Learning from the

results of the three earlier bioassays, the highest oil concentrations for Murcott and

Valencia bioassay were set at 240µL oil/g carrot, and concentration treatments again

focused on concentrations above, rather than below, the base oil concentrations. For

Valencia, the base oil concentration was taken as the first concentration treatment as

the oil yield was low for this fruit and the available oil was conserved for treatments

at higher concentrations (Table 4.1).

Page 105: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

81

Table 4.2: The volumes of citrus peel essential oil of five citrus types used per 3g of

carrot diet in Bactrocera tryoni larval feeding bioassays. Treatment Murcott

essential oil

(µL)

Navel

essential oil

(µL)

Lemon

essential oil

(µL)

Valencia

essential oil

(µL)

Grapefruit

essential oil

(µL)

T1 3 12.27 6.09 13.44* 5.31

T2 15.6* 15.27 9.09 60 8.31

T3 30 18.27* 12.09* 90 11.31*

T4 60 21.27 15.09 120 14.31

T5 90 24.27 18.09 135 17.31

T6 120 27.27 21.09 150 20.31

T7 135 30.27 24.09 165 23.31

T8 150 33.27 27.09 180 26.31

T9 165 36.27 30.09 195 29.31

T10 180 39.27 33.09 210 32.31

T11 195 42.27 36.09 225 35.31

T12 210 72 48 240 54

T13 225 102 78 84

T14 240 132 108 114

T15 162 138 147

T16 180 180 180

*Represents the oil yield equivalent obtained from 1g of peel (i.e. base oil concentration)

4.2.2.3 Insects

Bactrocera tryoni eggs were obtained from a laboratory colony maintained by

Queensland DEEDI, Boggo Road Ecosciences Precinct, Brisbane. This colony was

16 – 17 generations old, fed with unlimited food (sugar and hydrolysed yeast) and

kept in a controlled temperature (CT) room at 25°C and 70% RH. Eggs were

obtained from the culture using plastic egging domes. Eggs from the egging dome

were transferred to water in a Petri dish, where ten eggs were subsequently counted

out and submerged in the oil-mixed carrot media. Manipulation of eggs was done

with a fine paint brush under a dissecting microscope to avoid damage to the eggs.

The individual diet cups were subsequently placed into larger plastic containers

(30cm x 10 cm) which had wet sponge pieces placed on the bottom to maintain high

ambient humidity. Finally, the plastic containers were kept in a completely dark CT

room at 25°C and 70% RH.

Page 106: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

82

4.2.2.4 Preliminary experiments

In order to better design the main feeding bioassays (see below), two preliminary

trials were run. The design and outcome of these trials are provided here.

The first preliminary experiment investigated the durations for B. tryoni egg hatching

and each of the three larval instars. This trial was done using the conditions

described above, with the diet containing base oil concentrations for Navel, lemon

and grapefruit: ten replicates were established for each citrus type. Each day,

beginning at trial Day 2 (i.e. the day after eggs were placed on diet), two replicates

were taken from each treatment and eggs/larvae were counted. Any larvae found

were identified to larval stage using Elson-Harris (1988). The days taken for egg

hatching and first appearance of first, second and third larval instars were recorded.

This preliminary experiment showed that by trial Day 5 larvae had developed to late

first instar and early second instar.

The second preliminary trial investigated the location of B. tryoni larvae at different

times in Navel orange, lemon and grapefruit. The citrus fruits were artificially

infested by lifting a flap of peel, into which 15 B. tryoni eggs were placed and the

peel flap then sealed using masking tape; three such inoculations were made into a

single fruit piece. This treatment was replicated two times for each citrus type and

the fruits were placed on wet vermiculate and kept in a CT room at 25°C and 70%

RH. One flap was opened from each citrus type from trial Day 3 onwards (as two

days are required for egg hatching) and the locations of emerged larvae were

observed under a 10x dissecting microscope. It was found that only the first and

early second instar larvae occurred in, or close to, the peel flavedo area: the late

second and third instars migrated to the pulp. These observations led me to conclude

that only first instar and early second instar larvae are exposed to citrus peel

chemicals.

4.2.2.5 Main feeding bioassays

Based on the results of the preliminary experiments, main feeding trials were

assessed on trial Day 5 (i.e. four days after inoculating diet with eggs). At this stage

the larvae had developed through to early second instars after which, in real fruit,

they would have migrated away from the peel and exposure to oils. To continue

exposing them to oil in their artificial diet would have thus unduly biased results.

Page 107: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

83

Treatments were scored as the number of living larvae, assessed under a dissecting

microscope.

4.2.3 Citrus oil fraction feeding assay

Of the many oil fractions present in citrus peel essential oil, six are common and

considered dominant across most citrus types: α-pinene, β-pinene, γ-terpinene, P-

cymene, myrcene and D–limonene (Giovanni, 2010). These individual oil fractions

were tested for their influence on B. tryoni immature development in feeding assays

as described above. D–limonene and β-pinene were obtained from Sigma Aldrich,

while other oil fractions were obtained from existing stock held by the behavioural

chemistry group of DEEDI.

While the concentration of each oil fraction for the specific citrus types used in my

trials was determined in this project (section 4.2.1), this information was not

available when feeding trials were commenced. Consequently, concentration

treatments for each oil fraction were based on values presented in previous

publications (Giovanni, 2010; Papachristos et al., 2009; Show, 1979). Starting and

ending treatment concentrations for each oil fraction was based on the minimum and

maximum oil fraction percentages present in different citrus types (as. reported in the

previous references), with intermediate treatments spaced equally between these.

Ten different oil concentrations were used from each oil fraction, except for D-

limonene (Table 4.2). With respect to D-limonene, 100% larval mortality was

observed in the treatment with the lowest concentration, (750µL/3g carrot), and all

higher treatments (see Results). In order to determine the minimum oil

concentration at which larvae could survive, D-limonene concentration levels were

subsequently decreased incrementally downwards to 10µL/g. Three replicates were

used for each concentration treatment for all oil fractions.

Page 108: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

84

Table 4.3: The volumes of citrus peel essential oil fractions used per 3g of carrot diet

in Bactrocera tryoni larval feeding assays.

Treatment

(T)

α-pinene

(µL)

β-pinene

(µL) γ-

terpinene

(µL)

P-cymene

(µL)

Myrcene

(µL)

D-

limonene

(µL)

T1 7.5 0.75 0.375 0.375 37.5 10

T2 22.5 3 3 0.75 48.75 20

T3 37.5 56.25 67.5 1.125 60 30

T4 52.5 75 105 1.5 71.25 50

T5 67.5 150 142.5 1.875 78.75 100

T6 82.5 300 180 2.25 90 200

T7 97.5 375 217.5 2.625 101.25 300

T8 112.5 450 225 3 112.5 400

T9 127.5 525 292.5 3.375 123.75 500

T10 142.5 600 330 3.75 135 600

T11 750

T12 1125

T13 1500

T14 1875

T15 2250

T16 2625

T17 3000

T18 3375

T19

3750

Data analysis

The mean essential oil yields of the five citrus types were compared using one - way

ANOVA and post - hoc pair-wise comparison using the Tukey test. The mean

numbers of B. tryoni larvae surviving in diets modified with the essential oils of five

citrus types, at the base oil concentrations, were compared using one - way ANOVA

with post - hoc comparisons using the LSD test. The effect of changing oil

concentration on larval survival was assessed using linear regression analysis. The

Page 109: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

85

same analyses were carried out for each of the individual oil fractions with the

exception of D–limonene, where larval survival was zero in all replicates at the base

oil concentration. Where the correlation between oil concentration and larval

survival was significant, the essential oil concentrations required to kill 50% and

90% of B. tryoni larvae were calculated by solving the fitted linear regression

function for the required oil concentration (µL/3g carrot) needed to kill 50% (i.e.

5/10 larvae) or 90% (9/10) of larvae. Values for LC50 and LC90 were divided by

three to obtain oil concentration in the unit of µL/g diet (i.e. carrot diet or peel).

4.3 RESULTS

4.3.1 Citrus essential oil yield and composition

Essential oil yield (µL/g of peel) was significantly different among the five citrus

types (F (4, 45) = 5.08, p = 0.002). The yield of essential oil from Navel oranges was

significantly higher than all other citrus types except Murcott. There was no

significant difference in the essential oil yield of lemon, Valencia and grapefruit,

while Murcott oil yield was not significantly different to any of the other citrus types

(Fig. 4.3).

Page 110: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

86

Citrus type

Murcott Navel Lemon Valencia Grapefruit

Oil

yiel

d (

L/g

of p

eel)

500

600

700

800

900

1000

1100

ab

a

b b

b

Figure 4.3: Mean (±SE) essential oil yield from the peel of five citrus types.

Columns surmounted by the same letter are no significantly different at α = 0.05.

D–limonene was the most common oil fraction presented in all citrus essential oil

types. All citrus types showed around 95% D-limonene in their essential oils except

for lemon, where the D-limonene concentration was 67%. In contrast, lemon

essential oil had higher α-pinene and γ-terpinene percentages than the other citrus.

Navel and grapefruit contained the lowest amounts of oxygenated monoterpene

compared to lemon, Murcott and Valencia which showed higher levels. Contrary to

expectations based on the literature, P-cymene was undetectable in all citrus types,

while β-pinene and γ-terpinene were detected only in lemon (Table 4.3).

Page 111: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

87

Table 4.4: Yield and composition of peel essential oil from five citrus fruit types. Oil composition (µL/g) Murcott

mandarin

Navel orange Eureka lemon Valencia orange

Yellow grapefruit

Mean oil yield

5.2 6.09 4.4 4.48 3.77

Hydrocarbon monoterpenes

α-pinene 0.00884 (0.17%)

0.02001 (0.29%)

0.13948 (3.17%)

0.00672 (0.15%)

0.0148 (0.26%)

β-pinene * * 0.04928 (1.12%)

* *

P-cymene * * * * * Myrcene 0.04784

(0.92%) 0.01035 (1.5%)

* 0.039424 (0.88%)

0.06144 (1.28%)

γ-terpinene * * 0.34496 (7.84%)

* *

D-limonene 4.97484 (95.67%)

6.5964 (95.6%)

2.93876 (66.79%)

4.266304 (95.23%)

4.50624 (93.88%)

Sabinene 0.572 (0.11%)

3.588 (0.52%)

0.47256 (10.74%)

0.024192 (0.54%)

0.04608 (0.96%)

Monoterpene * 0.00414 (0.06%)

* * 0.0072 (0.15%)

Monoterpene * 0.00345 (0.05%)

* * 0.02784 (0.58%)

Monoterpene * * * * 0.024 (0.5%)

β-caryophyllene * * 0.0000924 (0.21%)

* *

α-bergamolene * * 0.0088 (0.2%)

* *

Oxygenated monoterpenes

Decanal 0.01508 (0.29%)

* * 0.011648 (0.26%)

0.01536 (0.32%)

Citronellal 0.0104 (0.14%)

* * * *

β-citral 0.00832 (0.16%)

* * 0.007168 (0.16%)

*

α-citral 0.02132 (0.41%)

* 0.11704 (2.66%)

* *

Neol * * 0.03344 (0.76%)

* *

Neral * * 0.08404 (1.91%)

* *

octanal * 0.06348 (0.92%)

* * 0.08736 (1.82%)

Linolool 0.08372 (1.61%)

* 0.02288 (0.52%)

0.064512 (10.74%)

*

α-terpineol 0.0104 (0.2%)

* 0.05324 (1.21%)

0.013888 (0.31%)

*

Oxigenated monoterpene * 0.03381 (0.49%)

0.0308 (0.7%)

* 0.012 (0.25%)

* Essential oil fraction not present in the essential oil or below detection level

Page 112: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

88

4.3.2 Essential oil feeding assay

There was no significant difference in B. tryoni survival to second instar among diets

modified by the addition of five citrus essential oil types at their base oil

concentrations (F (4,10) = 0.276, p = 0.88) (Fig. 4.4). The mean survival to second

instar was 66 ± 0.48 for all treatments and trials combined.

Citrus types

Murcott Navel Lemon Valencia Grapefruit

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

aa

a

a

a

Figure 4.4: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni egg to second instar larval survival in

diets modified by the addition of peel essential oil extracts of five citrus types.

Maximum survival = 10, n = 3 replicates for each treatment.

There was a significant negative correlation between B. tryoni survival to the second

instar and increasing oil concentration for lemon, grapefruit and Navel, but not for

Murcott and Valencia (Fig. 4.5). The linear regression models explained 70%, 44%

and 38% of egg/larval survival for Navel, lemon and grapefruit, respectively. The

essential oil concentration needed to kill 50% and 90% of B. tryoni juveniles by the

second instar was approximately three times higher than natural oil concentration in

lemon, grapefruit and Navel, the fruit types for which these parameters could be

calculated (Table 4.4).

Page 113: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

89

y = -0.006x + 5.6 (p = 0.26)R2 = 0.1

Murcott essential oil concentration (L/3g carrot)

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

2

3

4

5

6

7

8a.

y = -0.006x + 5.6 (p = 0.26)R2 = 0.1

Navel essential oil concentration (L/3g carrot)

0 50 100 150 200

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

2

4

6

8

10

y = -0.03x + 7.3 (p = 0.0001)R2 = 0.71

b.

Lemon essential oil concentration (L/ 3g carrot)

0 50 100 150 200

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8c.

y = -0.018x + 5.8 (p = 0.049)R2 = 0.44

Valencia essential oil concentration L/ 3g carrot)

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

4.5

5.0

5.5

6.0

6.5

7.0

7.5

8.0

8.5

y = -0.003x + 6.55 (p = 0.48)R2 = 0.04

d.

e.

Grapefruit essential oil concentration L/ 3g carrot)

0 50 100 150 200

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

2

4

6

8

10

y = - 0.02x + 6.5 (p = 0.0.01)R2 = 0.38

Figure 4.5: Survival of Bactrocera tryoni from egg to late second instar feeding on

an artificial larval diet containing increasing concentrations of citrus peel oil from (a)

Murcott mandarin, (b) Navel orange (c) Eureka lemon, (d) Valencia orange and (e)

yellow grapefruit.

Page 114: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

90

Table 4.5: Estimated essential oil concentration required to cause 50% and 90% Bactrocera tryoni egg and larval mortality by the end of the second instar.

Navel Lemon Grapefruit

Oil concentration in

peel (µL/g peel)

6.09 4.4 3.77

Oil concentration to kill

50% larvae (µL/g food)

22 13 16

Oil concentration to kill

90% larvae (µL/g food)

39 23 29

4.3.3. Citrus essential oil fraction feeding assay

There was no significant difference in B. tryoni survival to late second instar among

diets modified by the additional of five citrus essential oil fractions at their estimated

base levels (F (4,10) = 1.85, p = 0.19) (Fig. 4.6). The mean survival to second instar

was 4.2 ± 0.62 for all treatments and trails combined.

Page 115: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

91

Citrus essential oil fraction

Alfa-pinene

Beta-pinene

gama-terpinene

P-cymeneMyrcene

Num

ber l

arva

e su

rviv

ing

0

2

4

6

8

a

a

a

a

a

Figure 4.6: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni egg to second instar larval survival in

diet modified by the additional of citrus peel essential oil fractions. Maximum

survival = 10, n = 3 replicates for each treatment.

With the exception of D-limonene, there were no significant linear relationships

between changing concentrations of the citrus oil fractions and B. tryoni survival to

second larval instar (Fig. 4.7). Only D-limonene showed a significant negative

relationship with second instar larval survival (R2 = 0.2, p = 0.05), but this

relationship is clearly spurious. Larval survival in D-limonene at any concentration

above 200µL/3g diet was zero, with survival dramatically reduced at concentrations

as low as 50µL/3g diet (Fig. 4.7).

Page 116: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

92

a.

-pinene concentration (L/ 3g carrot)

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

2

4

6

8

y = 0.1 x + 3.09 (p = 1.8)R2 = 0.2

- pinene concentration (L/3g carrot)

0 100 200 300 400 500 600

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

y = - 0.002 x + 3.09 (p = 0.4)R2 = 0.09

b.

c.

- terpinene concentration (L/3g carrot)

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

2

4

6

8

10

y = 0.002 x + 5.6 (p = 0.58)R2 = 0.05

P- cymene concentration (L/3g carrot)

0 1 2 3 4

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

2

4

6

8

10

y = - 0.4 x + 8.17 (p = 0.12)R2 = 0.26

d.

Myrcene concentration (L/3g carrot)

20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

y = - 0.01 x + 5.58 (p = 0.11)R2 = 0.28

e.

D - limonene concentration (L/3g carrot)

0 1000 2000 3000 4000

Num

ber s

urvi

ving

larv

ae

0

2

4

6

8

10

Y = 12.2 e-0.031 X (p <0.001)R2 = 0.933

f.

Figure 4.7: Bactrocera tryoni survival from egg to late second instar feeding on

artificial larval diet containing increasing concentrations of the citrus peel oil

fractions (a) α-pinene (b) β-pinene (c) γ-terpinene (d) P-cymene (e) myrcene (f) D-

limonene.

Page 117: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

93

4.4 DISCUSSION

Effect of citrus essential oil and oil fractions on survival of B. tryoni larvae

The results showed that there was no significant effect of essential oils from five

citrus types at the base oil concentration on B. tryoni larval survival to second instar.

However, with increasing concentration, larval survival was differentially affected by

the essential oils of Navel, lemon and grapefruit, but not Murcott and Valencia (Fig.

4.5). It was calculated that only 13µL oil/g diet was sufficient to kill 50% of B. tryoni

eggs and 1st instar for lemon, while 16µL oil/g diet and 22µL oil/g diet were needed

for the same mortality by grapefruit and Navel essential oils, respectively. Even

though, experimentally, Navel, lemon and grapefruit essential oils showed significant

negative effects on B. tryoni larvae, the oil concentrations required to kill 50% of

individuals were very high compared to the oil concentrations naturally present in the

peel of respective citrus types. The oil concentrations required to kill 50% of larvae

were approximately three times higher than natural concentrations for lemon (4.4µL/g

diet), grapefruit (3.77 µL/g diet) and Navel (6.09 µL/g diet) (Table 4.4).

Of the specific oil fractions studied, only changing concentration of D-limonene

resulted in a dose response curve for B. tryoni larval survival, and this was very

dramatic. At all tested concentrations above 66.7 µL oil/g diet, larval mortality in

bioassays was 100 percent, and strong toxic effects were recorded from only 16µL

oil/g diet. However, as for the crude oils, these concentrations are still higher than

observed in real fruit: the average oil concentration of D-limonene in the fruit tested

was 4.65 ± 0.59 µL/g peel (Table 4.3). None of the other oil fractions showed a

significant relationship between B. tryoni mortality and changing concentration and,

indeed, the GC-MS results demonstrated that for the citrus types studied here, some

of the essential oil fractions only occurred at trace or undetectable levels. This is not

uncommon, for example P-cymene is a common citrus oil fraction, but is found only

at trace levels in many citrus types (Giovanni, 2010; Shaw, 1979) and the GC-MS

results from the current study failed to detect this oil fraction in any of the assayed

citrus types. Similarly, β pinene and γ terpinene were only detected in lemon D-

limonene and α-pinene were the only fractions found in all five citrus types. The

absence or very low levels of these fractions in the oils of my studied citrus types

and the failure of these fractions to demonstrate a mortality/concentration effect,

Page 118: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

94

contrasted with the very high concentrations of D-limonene and the significant

mortality caused by this fraction, strongly suggests that, at least of the fractions

studied, D-limonene is the most likely oil fraction responsible for killing B. tryoni

eggs and larvae in citrus.

Comparison with other tephritids

The peel oils of many citrus types are highly toxic to the immature stages of

tephritids other than B. tryoni, and oil toxicity is considered the main reason for the

poor host status of citrus (i.e. high susceptibility vs. low susceptibility) for those

species (Aluja et al., 2003; Leyva et al., 1991; Papachristos et al., 2009). Newly

hatched larvae of C. capitata were significantly affected by orange (50% larval death

at 6µL oil/g diet) and lemon (50% larval death at 10µL oil/g diet) essential oils, as

well as by specific oil fractions (50% larval death occurs at 20-40µL/g of α- pinene,

20-40 µL/g of β- pinene, 10µL/g of Myrcene, 7µL/g of γ- terpinene and 7µL/g of D

limonene) after two day exposure to essential oil and oil fractions respectively

(Papachristos et al., 2009). Similarly, first instar larval mortality of A. suspensa in

undiluted lemon, orange and grapefruit peel oil was 100%, 98% and 88%,

respectively after 1- 2 hour exposure (Greany et al., 1983).

‘Conflict’ of results with other B. tryoni studies

While the overall results of this chapter indicate that peel chemicals were less toxic

to B. tryoni immature stages than for other tephritids in comparative bioassay

studies, Australian field data (Lloyd et al., 2010) and laboratory experiments

(Chapter 2) show that citrus are poor hosts for B. tryoni. With respect to bioassay

studies with other species, A. suspensa larvae were tested in 100% undiluted peel

essential oils and C. capitata were tested in oil extracted from freshly picked citrus

fruits. Freshly picked citrus fruit may contain higher levels of toxic compounds

compared to harvested and stored fruits (Salvatore et al., 2004) which was the case in

this study. This could be one reason for the low level of essential oil toxicity to B.

tryoni larvae shown in this study. Oil fraction were not as toxic to B. tryoni larvae as

they are to other tephritid larvae (Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et al., 2009).

Results presented in Chapter 2 showed that B. tryoni immature survival in citrus was

very low in all fruits types including, for example, Valencia, despite Valencia

essential oil having no significant concentration effect on larvae in this chapter (Fig.

Page 119: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

95

4.5). If citrus peel oil plays a major role in immature survival of B. tryoni, as has

been suggested for other tephritids (Aluja & Mangan, 2008), then there is a

discrepancy between the laboratory based host susceptibility trials (Chapter 2 ) and

the feeding bioassay results presented here: why might this be?

Larval mortality in feeding bioassays for Navel, lemon and grapefruit oils increased

at higher concentration levels (i.e. above 50µL/3g diet) (Fig. 4.5), with 50%

mortality estimated at oil concentrations three times higher than base concentrations.

One reason that higher oil concentrations are required to induce higher mortalities is

because of the bioassay design. In the feeding bioassays the eggs were deposited in

a diet throughout which oil was mixed and diluted, whereas in real citrus fruits the

larvae rupture an oil gland and are exposed to undiluted oil. If peel oils do explain

citrus host use by B. tryoni, then this bioassay dilution effect may explain why larvae

only died in diets with higher concentrations of citrus peel oil. While this

explanation may work for Naval orange, grapefruit and lemon, for which significant

effects of increasing oil concentration were observed, it does not explain the results

for Murcott and Valencia where no such concentration effects were recorded (Fig.

4.5). This suggests oil alone does not explain citrus host use by B. tryoni.

Understanding the whole peel effect

Murcott is, of the five citrus types tested, the best host for B. tryoni immature

survival (Chapter 2,) which might suggest that its oil is less toxic than the other

citrus varieties, but the results do not support such an interpretation (Fig.4.6).

Chapter 3 results demonstrated that peel physical properties have significant effects

on B. tryoni egg positioning and these properties significantly vary across citrus

types. Irrespective of the peel thickness, female B. tryoni laid eggs in the flavedo

layer of five citrus types except Murcott in which eggs were laid in the albedo.

Thus, larvae that hatch in the flavedo move longer distances to reach the nutritious

pulp and have to overcome mechanical resistance (Bodenheimer, 1951; Jones, 1989)

from the egg chamber wall and thick pith (Back & Pemberton, 1915). While

encountering these physical barriers, moving larvae may rupture oil glands in the

flavedo that release contents that are toxic to larvae. The risk posed to larvae might

be exacerbated when oil gland size or density is higher, which increases the oil

concentration in the larval microenvironment (e.g. Navel and Valencia). When

Page 120: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

96

encountering several physical barriers together with toxic chemicals, larval

movement within the host fruit may be impeded, which may then retarted larval

development or kill the larvae. However, such physical constraints are absent in

artificial diet where larvae can easily access food and water, which enhance larval

survival and development and may help the insect to overcome the potentially side

effects of ingesting citrus oil chemicals.

Progress and next chapter

While the work of Chapter 3 (peel morphology) and Chapter 4 (peel oils) have

partially helped explain the general host utilisation patterns seen in Chapter 2, there

are limitations to these studies. For example, it is recorded for other tephritid species

that it is the oxygenated monoterpene fractions found in citrus oils that are the most

toxic (Papachristos et al., 2009; Salvatore et al., 2004), but the levels of these

chemicals decline after harvest and storage. The fruits used in the laboratory

experiments in Chapter 2 and for oil extraction in Chapter 4 were all picked and

stored before use, and so are unlikely to have the oil profile of fruits on trees.

Similarly, peel toughness in unpicked fruits is likely to be higher than in picked and

stored fruits due to loss of moisture (Ladaniya, 2007), and this may significantly

affect adult oviposition (Chapter 2) and larval movement (Back & Pemberton, 1915).

There is also a general concern about using laboratory studies alone to understand

host patterns of insects (see end of Discussion, Chapter 2). Given these issues, while

still trying to understand the mechanisms (versus pattern) of B. tryoni citrus host use,

the next chapter investigates B. tryoni utilisation of citrus in the field. Using fruit

‘on-tree’ is a better test of the actual chemical and physical environment that B.

tryoni faces in the field and allows comparison with the laboratory results of Chapter

2.

Page 121: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

97

CHAPTER 5

Bactrocera tryoni Oviposition and Offspring

Performance in Field Unpicked Citrus Fruits

Page 122: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

98

5. 1 INTRODUCTION

In laboratory based insect-plant experiments, environmental factors that are normally

variable, such as temperature, rainfall and RH, are controlled or absent. Similarly,

many plant characteristics such as leaf and fruit moisture levels, volatile emissions

and chemical profiles are also either absent, or potentially very different from the

field situation (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Raghu et al., 2004). Simply picking fruit

alters mechanical and chemical properties of the fruit, which can affect insect

behaviour (Greany & Szentesi, 1979; Levinson et al., 2003). In citrus, chemicals

known to influence fruit fly oviposition and larval development decline after harvest

(Greany et al., 1983; Salvatore et al., 2004); while in apple Bower (1977) reported

that B. tryoni larval growth was significantly lower in picked apples than unpicked

apples, a result he attributed to unknown induced plant defences.

While laboratory experiments are necessary to explore the detailed interactions

between plant and insects, such investigations become more realistic when these

interactions are tested in the field (Aluja & Mangan, 2008). In my previous chapters,

which were all laboratory based, I demonstrated that B. tryoni immature survival in

citrus is very poor (Chapter 2) and that this was caused by both peel physical

(Chapter 3) and chemical (Chapter 4) properties. However, as recognised in those

chapters and above, both chemical and physical properties of fruit can vary between

picked and unpicked fruit, as will a great array of other biotic and abiotic variables.

For these reasons, reliance on laboratory trials alone for host use assessment is not

considered best practice (Aluja & Mangan, 2008). Recognising this caveat, this

chapter investigates B. tryoni larval host susceptibility of the citrus types Valencia

orange, Eureka lemon and Ellendale mandarin in the field environment. To allow

comparative statements to be made on the general host quality of citrus, the work is

repeated on a non-citrus host, nectarine (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch var. nectarina

(Aiton) Maxim), which is considered a preferred host of B. tryoni (Ero et al., 2011).

In addition to the host susceptibility results obtained from the field cage environment

fly production from citrus and non citrus fruit in open field environments in a citrus

growing area (i.e. Mundubbera) was also investigated. To extend the work from a

simple repeat of the laboratory trials, experiments were conducted so as to allow

estimation of age specific mortality, from which a single cohort, age-specific life

Page 123: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

99

table was calculated for each fruit type. Life-tables are the simplest form of

population modelling, a theme which is developed more extensively in the next

chapter.

5.2 METHODS

5.2.1 Study Site

Field studies were conducted in an organic citrus orchard at Boreen Point

(26°14S;152°59E), located 135km north of Brisbane, and an organic nectarine

orchard located at Redlands (26°24S;152°59E), 30km southeast of Brisbane. The

citrus were grown as part of landscaping within an organic golf course complex (Fig.

5.1). Three species of citrus: Eureka lemon (Citrus limon), Ellendale mandarin (C.

reticulata) and Valencia orange (C. sinensis); plus nectarine (Prunus persica var.

nectarine Sunwright) were tested between early Spring 2011 and late Summer 2012.

Figure 5.1: The Boreen Point field site where Bactrocera tryoni host utilization was

studied on Ellendale mandarin, Valencia orange and Eureka lemon.

5.2.2 Flies

Bactrocera tryoni used in the experiments were 17 generations old, obtained from

the Department of Employment, Economic Development & Innovation (DEEDI)

fruit fly colony facilities at the EcoScience Precinct (Dutton Park, Brisbane,

Page 124: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

100

Australia). Emergent adult flies were provided with ad libitum access to water, dry

granular sucrose and protein (yeast hydrolysate enzymatic MP Biomedicals, NSW,

Australia). All flies were reared following standard Q-fly rearing protocols (Pike et

al., 2001) and maintained in mesh cages (40 x 40 x 40cm) at 25-27°C, 75 ± 3% RH,

with a photoperiod of 12:12 (L:D) h. For each experiment, 200 gravid females (16-

24d old) were collected and placed in a small mesh cage (20 x 20 x 30cm) for

transport to the field site. Twenty flies were selected and stored in 70% ethanol for

subsequent dissection and counting of eggs in their ovaries.

5.2.3 Fruit infestation by laboratory reared B. tryoni flies

Ten trees of Valencia orange, Ellendale mandarine, Eureka lemon and nectarine

were randomly selected. Four immature fruits from each tree of four fruit types were

bagged to avoid any infestation. When fruits were matured (colour-change) each

fruit of each fruit tree were covered with cloth mesh cages (20 x 20 x 30cm). A

gravid B. tryoni female was released into each cage and observed for at least one

hour (Fig.5.2a,b). Females were allowed to oviposit once, after which they were

removed, separately stored and subsequently dissected in the laboratory to count the

eggs remaining in the ovaries. The infested fruit were enclosed in paper bags and

left in situ. The infestation level (i.e. number of eggs laid) was estimated by

subtracting the egg load remaining after oviposition from the mean egg load of 20

flies assessed prior to oviposition. Females that did not oviposit during the one hour

period were replaced with a female from the same cohort and the process repeated.

After 11 to 13 days, three of the four fruit were harvested and, in the laboratory,

placed on drip trays on a bed of fine, moist vermiculite in individually marked mesh-

covered plastic containers for another 7-28 days under controlled conditions (25-

27°C, 70 ± 3% RH). Counts were made of emergent pupae and subsequent adults

and parasites. To assess larval/pupal survival under field conditions, the fourth fruit

was placed on the ground under the parent fruit tree and covered with a pupal

emergence trap (Fig 5.2c) to collect any emergent adult flies. Flies were collected

weekly, with the trap removed 21 days after initial placement.

Page 125: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

101

5.2.4 Fruit infestation by wild B. tryoni flies

Six Valencia orange, Ellendale mandarin, Eureka lemon and nectarine fruits

potentially infested by wild flies were harvested from ten trees for each fruit species

(i.e. 60 fruit per species). Five fruit were returned to the laboratory and pupae reared

out as described above. The sixth fruit was placed on the ground under the parent

tree and emergent adults recovered using pupal emergence traps as described above.

Host infestation data obtained from other sources

Citrus and non-citrus host infestation data collected from area wide management

program undertaken by QLD DEEDI (Brisbane) in Mundubbera were also obtained.

Fruit collection was undertaken across central Burnett district during 1999. These

fruits were collected from gardens in town, along water courses and from other

native vegetation, and the flies emerging from these fruits were identified to species

and counted. This data was supplied by QLD DEEDI.

Page 126: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

102

Figure 5.2. Illustrations of various stages of field experiments for Bactrocera tryoni

citrus host use. (A) Adult B. tryoni examining the fruit attached to the tree inside the

cloth mesh cage. (B) Citrus fruits enclosed with cloth mesh and paper cages. (C)

Inverted funnel traps, under which one infested fruit was placed, for capturing

emergent adult flies.

Page 127: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

103

5.2.5 Life table analysis

A simple, single cohort, age based life table analysis was performed using the

collected data. Age (X) 0 was the combined egg and larval stages; age 1 was the

pupal period; while age two was the teneral adult. The number surviving in each age

(= survival number) is denoted as Sx. Using these survival numbers as the raw data

for each life stage, the following population parameters were determined (Donovan

& Weldon, 2002):

Standardized survival schedule (lx)

𝑙𝑥 =𝑆𝑥𝑆𝑜

Where Sx is number surviving in this age in the population and So is initial surviving

number at age zero.

Life expectancy (ex)

Life expectancy is how much longer an individual of a given age can be expected to

live beyond its present age.

To compute ex, first the proportion of survivors at the mid point of each time interval

(Lx) was calculated.

𝐿𝑥 =𝑙𝑥 + 𝑙𝑥 + 1

2

Secondly, all Lx values summed from age of interest (n) up to the oldest age, k

𝑇𝑥 = �𝐿𝑥𝑘

𝑥=𝑛

Finally, ex was calculated as

𝑒𝑥 =𝑇𝑥𝑙𝑥

Life tables were made for Valencia orange, Ellendale mandarin, Eureka lemon and

nectarine. Parasites emerged from nectarine fruits, so separate life tables were made

for parasitized population and un-parasitized population for nectarine fruits. In the

parasitized population the teneral adult number (Sx at age 2) was reduced by the

number of parasites found in the population. To do a comparison, another life table

was made without reducing the fruit fly population by the number of parasites (i.e.

assumes that there were no parasites in the population).

Page 128: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

104

5.2.6 Other data analysis The mean clutch size of laboratory reared flies infesting the three citrus and

nectarine fruits were compared using Kruskal Wallis test, with post hoc pair wise

comparison done using the Mann-Whitney U test. Each data set of the mean fly

emergence from the laboratory and field fly infested three citrus types and nectarine

was compared separately using Kruskal Wallis test and pair wise comparison was

done using Mann-whitney U test. In the wild fly infested fruits there were no flies

produce from Valencia, so it was not included in the statistical test.

5.3 RESULTS

5.3.1 Fruits infested by laboratory reared B. tryoni

5.3.1.1 Clutch size

There was significant difference in the estimated clutch size among the four fruit

types (H3 = 23.3, p < 0.05). Estimated clutch size in Eureka lemon was significantly

higher than Valencia, Ellendale and nectarine, while the estimated clutch sizes in

these three fruits were not significantly different to each other (Fig. 5.3).

Page 129: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

105

Fruit type

Valencia Ellendale Lemon Nectarin

Clu

tch

size

20

30

40

50

a

a

b

a

Figure 5.3: Estimated mean (±SE) egg clutch size of laboratory reared B. tryoni

laying into four fruit types hanging on trees.

5.3.1.2 Adult emergence Fly emergence from the four fruit types were significantly different from each other

(H3 = 75. 34, p < 0.05). There was significantly higher fly emergence from nectarine

compared to Valencia, Ellendale and Eureka lemon, while the fly emergence was not

significantly different among these latter three fruit types (Fig.5.4). No flies were

recovered from known infested fruit placed on the ground below the tree and

covered with an emergence trap.

Page 130: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

106

Fruit type

Valencia Ellendale Lemon Nectarine

Fly

em

erge

nce

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

aa

a

b

Figure 5.4: Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni adult fly emergence from four fruit types

infested on the tree and left for 11-13 days before being harvested and returned to the

laboratory for pupal recovery.

5.3.2 Field infestation rates by wild B. tryoni There was a significant difference in adult fly emergence among Ellendale, Eureka

lemon and nectarine (H2 = 39.6, p<0.05), while no flies were reared from Valencia

oranges. Nectarine showed a significantly higher fly production than Ellendale and

Eureka lemon, while there is no significant difference between Ellendale and Eureka.

No flies were recovered from fruit placed on the ground below the tree and covered

with an emergence trap.

Page 131: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

107

Fruit type

Valencia Ellendale Lemon Nectarine

Fly

emer

genc

e

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

a a

b

Figure 5.5. Mean (±SE) Bactrocera tryoni emergence from field fruits potentially

infested by wild fly populations.

5.3.3 Field infestation of B. tryoni in citrus and non-citrus fruits in Mundubbera

In a predominantly citrus production area, B. tryoni production from various Citrus

species and varieties under commercial management is noticeably lower than from

the non-citrus, non-commercial hosts of B. tryoni grown in the same district. Eight

out of 11 citrus types yielded not a single fly. Even if some citrus fruits produced

flies, the fruit to fly ratio was still very low. In contrast, non-citrus fruits showed

very high fly production (Table 5.1).

Page 132: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

108

Table 5.1. Bactrocera tryoni fly production in the field infested citrus fruit types in

Mundubbera and Gayndah

Common name No. Fruits collected

No. Flies emerged

Fruits: fly ratio

Citrus fruits

Citrus reticulata Mandarin, imperial

66 0 1:0 (0%)

Mandarin, ellendale

329 8 1:0.02 (2%)

Mandarin, murcott

294 4 1:0.01 (1%)

Mandarin, hickson

38 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Mandarin, duchess

8 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Mandarin, emperor

43 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Citrus limon Eureka 203 4 1:0.02 (2%)

Citrus sinensis Orange, navel 100 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Orange, Valencia 114 6 1:0.05 (5%)

Citrus jambhiri Bush lemon 86 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Citrus aurantifolia

Tahitian lime 22 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Citrus grandis Grapefruit 42 0 1:0.00 (0%)

Non-citrus fruits

Mangifera indica

Mango 208 252 1:0.8 (121%)

Psidium cattleineam

Cherry guava 415 343 1:1.2 (83%)

Morus nigra Mulberry 590 590 1:1 (100%)

Eriobotria japonika

Loquat 619 803 1:0.77 (130%)

5.3.4 Life table analysis The lowest life expectancy (ex) for all citrus types was the combined egg/larval stage

(age 0), but in nectarine life expectancy of eggs/larvae was higher than pupal life

expectancy in both parasitized and un-parasitised populations. Pupal life expectancy

in Ellendale was slightly lower than other two citrus types. No parasites were

recovered from citrus fruits, but a small number were recovered from nectarines. In

Page 133: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

109

the parasitized nectarine population, the juvenile and pupal life expectancy was

slightly lower than the unparasitized population (Table 5.2). The survivorship

curves illustrate the high levels of mortality exhibited by the early B. tryoni life

stages in citrus and are typical of a Type III survivorship curve. Unexpectedly,

however, the higher levels of pupal mortality recorded for insects reared from

nectarine, means that the B. tryoni survivorship curves from this fruit was much

more of a Type II pattern (Fig. 5.6).

Table 5.2. Age based population parameters of Bactrocera tryoni reared from

different fruit types

Fruit type Age

Number at beginning of

age Sx

Proportion at beginning of

age lx

Number dying in age

(dx)

Life expectancy

ex

Valencia 0 (egg & larvae)

926

1

- 0.51

1 (pupae)

7

0.007559

919 1.36

2 (teneral

adult) 6

0.006479

1 0.50

Ellendale mandarin

0 (egg & larvae)

527

1

- 0.60

1 (pupae)

31

0.058824

496 1.21

2 (teneral adult)

22

0.041746

9 0.50

Eureka lemon 0 (egg &

larvae)

1,424

1

- 0.51

1 (pupae)

8

0.005618

1,416 1.38

2 (teneral adult)

7

0.004916

1 0.50

Nectarine (un-parasitized)

0 egg & larvae)

924

1

- 1.5812

1 (pupae)

606

0.655844

318 1.1485

2 (teneral adult)

393

0.425325

213 0.5000

Nectarine (parasitized)

0 (egg & larvae)

924

1

- 1.573593

1 (pupae))

606

0.655844

318 1.136964

2 (teneral adult)

386

0.417749

220 0.5

Page 134: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

110

Age (x)

0.0 1.0 2.0

Sta

ndar

dise

d su

rviv

orsh

ip c

urve

(lx)

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

Figure 5.6. Standardised survivorship curves of Bactrocera tryoni from four fruit

types infested on the tree and left for 11-13 days before being harvested and returned

to the laboratory for pupal recovery and adult emergence. Age (X) ‘0’ is a combined

egg/larval stage, age (X) ‘1’ is the pupal stage and age (X) ‘2’ teneral adults stage.

( ) represent lx Valencia ( ) represent Ellendale (lx), (X) represent Eureka (lx),(×)

represent parasitised nectarine, ( ) represent un-parasitised nectarine.

Page 135: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

111

5.4 DISCUSSION

Results confirmed laboratory trials that citrus are poor hosts for B. tryoni. Fly

emergence from citrus fruits infested by laboratory flies was very low compared to

the estimated number of initial eggs, while recovery of B. tryoni from citrus fruits

potentially infested by wild flies was also very low. In contrast, significant numbers

of flies were recovered from artificially and wild infested nectarines, as well as from

other non-citrus hosts in the Mundubbera dataset (Figs. 5.4 & 5.5, Table 5.1). Life

table analysis reinforced the interpretation that it is the poor egg/larval survivorship

that impacts most strongly on the low suitability of citrus fruit as hosts. On the other

hand, the survival of eggs and larvae in a non citrus host nectarine was relatively

high but pupal survival rate from this host was low (Fig. 5.6).

In contrast to fly emergence data, clutch size data showed that number of eggs laid

into citrus was similar to that of a preferred host (i.e. nectarine). Indeed, Eureka

lemon received a significantly higher egg load than nectarine, indicating that citrus is

not an unattractive oviposition host for B. tryoni (Fig.5.3). It has been reported for

tephritids that larger clutch sizes indicate a higher preference by the ovipositing

female for the larval host (Balagawi, 2005; Ioannou et al., 2012; Rattanapun et al.,

2009), so our clutch size results demonstrated that the citrus fruits were as equally, or

more attractive to B. tryoni as nectarine.

In comparison to the laboratory based citrus infestation results reported in Chapter 2,

the field data presented in this chapter shows similar results in terms of fly

production compared to the initial eggs laid. However, in terms of absolute fly

production per fruit type, fly production in laboratory experiments were higher than

for field - infested fruits (Fig.5.4, 5.5 & Table 2.1). For example, estimated mean

percentage survival from egg to adult in Murcott mandarin in the laboratory was

18%, while estimated mean percentage survival from egg to adult in Ellendale

mandarin on-tree was only 0.86%. In contrast though, clutch size results were

reversed between laboratory and field. In the laboratory trials there were generally

much lower numbers of eggs per clutch, for example mean clutch size of Eureka

lemon was five eggs in the laboratory study and 47 eggs in fruit on tree.

Page 136: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

112

These differences between lab and field results are not unexpected, and indeed an

expectation of finding such differences is the reason this work was done. Unpicked

citrus fruits contain toxic chemicals that decline with ripening (Seo & Tang, 1982;

Seo et al., 1983) and after harvest and storage (Salvatore et al., 2004). Even in fruits

with less complex chemistry than citrus, this can impact on fruit fly larvae when still

on-tree: Bower (1977) reported that unpicked apples (especially two weeks before

beingpicked) had a highly toxic effect on immature B. tryoni in comparison to picked

apples. The fruits in my field study remained on the tree for two weeks after being

infested by flies and thus the eggs and newly hatched larvae would have been

exposed to more toxic compounds (such as coumarin, linalool and citral, Salvatore

2004) than the picked and stored fruits used in my laboratory studies. Differences in

oils may not be the only factor causing greater mortality in field fruit. Fruits on-tree

have a greater turger pressure than picked citrus fruits (Ladaniya, 2007) and this

would increase the peel mechanical resistance for larval movement inside the fruit

(Back & Pemberton, 1915). Due to these greater chemical and physical constraints

in unpicked fruits, B. tryoni fly production is not unexpectedly lower in the field

environment than observed in a traditional laboratory based study. Differences in

clutch size can also be explained by differences in picked versus unpicked fruit.

Unpicked fruits respire and produce CO2, which is an oviposition stimulant for B.

tryoni (Stange, 1999); they also produce more volatiles and have higher moisture

levels (Levinson et al., 2003) which are known to cause flies to lay more eggs (Aluja

& Mangan, 2008).

These results reinforce the fact that citrus is an unfavourable host for B. tryoni larvae

and total fly production (Table 5.2). Host quality effects on immature stage

performance strongly influence population size within a single cohort, and thus

might be expected to strongly influence the total size of fly populations in field.

When considering multiple cohorts with overlapping generations in the field, if citrus

is available as the only major host in the environment then low host quality may well

have a significant negative effect on B. tryoni population growth. In contrast, a good

quality host such as nectarine may produce a very different and positive outcome for

B. tryoni population growth. In next and final research chapter, I investigate further

how larval host quality affect may influence B. tryoni population dynamics in an

Page 137: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

113

orchard environment using a cohort based, mechanistic model (DYMEX, (Maywald,

1999) and a modified B. tryoni population model (Yonow et al., 2004).

Page 138: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

114

CHAPTER 6

Effect of Larval Host Quality on Bactrocera tryoni Population Dynamics

Page 139: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

115

6.1 INTRODUCTION

In chapter 5 it was postulated that poor hosts, such as citrus, would contribute low

numbers of B. tryoni to an agricultural metapopulation in comparison to better

quality hosts. Simple life table analysis suggests that mortality in the egg/larval

stage will most strongly influence total population size, but the single cohort life-

table approach used in Chapter 5 is not, of itself, sufficient to support that claim.

Using a mechanistic modelling approach, the aim of this chapter is to investigate

how larval host quality might influence B. tryoni population dynamics in the field.

In the context of the thesis, this chapter extends our understanding of B. tryoni citrus

host use from the very finest scale (how peel properties influence oviposition and

larval survival) (Chapters 3 & 4), to laboratory host use trials (Chapter 2), then

controlled semi-field studies (Chapter 5) and now predictive modelling of the

ofcitrus host use effects on total population size.

The dynamics of insect populations are traditionally considered to be driven by both

density dependant (competition, resource use, etc.) and density independent

(weather) factors (Ferris & Wilson, 1987). The relative influences of these two

factors are dependent on the insect species and how different life stages interact with

the environment. Depending on the life historycharacteristics of the insect (e.g.

reproduction, mortality) and the environment (e.g. temperature, natural enemies), the

relative importance of density dependent versus independent factors on an insect

species’ population dynamics will vary in different systems (Berryman, 1999; Ferris

& Wilson, 1987). When density independent factors such as temperature and rainfall

do not potentially limit population growth, density dependant factors, such as host

availability, host quality and natural enemies, could become the primary factors that

limitpopulation growth (Berryman, 1999).

Many workers have reported that the determinants of tephritid population dynamics

vary greatly in different host systems, even for the same fly species (Bateman, 1972;

Papadopoulos et al., 2001). For example low winter temperatures in temperate areas

may cause tephritids to enter diapause (Christenson, 1960), to cease oviposition and

resorb eggs (Fletcher, 1975; Israely et al., 1997), or may cause high egg mortality

inside fruits (Reissig, 1979), all of which may lead to a reduced population size.

However, in tropical and subtropical regions temperature and rainfall are often

Page 140: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

116

considered optimal for tephritids (Yonow & Suthurst, 1998) and in such cases host

availability (Dorji et al., 2006; Hurtado et al., 1995), host quality (Bower, 1977;

Messina et al., 1991; Messina & Jones, 1990; Neilson, 1971), adult host preference

(Katsoyannos et al., 1998), and natural enemies (Bess et al., 1963; Ero et al., 2011;

Wharton & Gilstrap, 1983) are considered most likely to influence fly population

dynamics.

It has been postulated that host availability and not climatic factors limit B. tryoni

populations in tropical and subtropical systems (Drew & Hooper, 1983;

Muthuthantri et al., 2010), although it is thought that temperatureis greatest driver of

B. tryoni numbers in temperate areas (Yonow & Sutherst, 1998). However, it needs

to be noted that the role of parasitoids, adult host preference, larval host acceptability

and larval host quality have not been investigated as drivers of B. tryoni population

dynamics. My thesis has shown that citrus is a poor quality host for B. tryoni larvae.

In a system where Citrus species and cultivars represent the most abundant resource

for oviposition, it might be speculated that poor juvenile survival in that host could

significantly negatively influence the population dynamics of the fly, even if large

numbers of the host are available. However, such an assumption ignores other

population regulating factors, such as climate, total female reproduction, adult

mortality, etc. To explore this issue, without needing to resort to long term,

intensive field research, process-based population modelling is a useful approach.

DYMEX® (Version 3) is a cohort based, mechanistic modelling tool for estimating

population phenology following changes in population parameters including

reproduction, mortality, diapause, etc (Lanoiselet et al., 2002; Maywald et al., 1999;

Nahrung et al., 2008). The greenhouse white fly Trialeurodes vaporariorum

(Westwood) life cycle was parameterised using DYMEX and simulated using

external environmental effects such as leaf and air temperature at different position

of the tomato plants inside the green house to predict the population dynamics of this

insect (JungJoon et al., 2011). Soybean aphid (Aphis glycines) population dynamics

was modelled with respect to natural enemy dynamics, other environmental cues and

host plant cues (Bahlaia et al., 2013) while, Lanoiselet et al.(2002) developed

DYMEX model for rise blast pathogen, Magnaporthe grisea and predict the

potential number of infections and sporulation events of the pathogens with respect

Page 141: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

117

to climatic factors. The DYMEX modelling software was developed to special

DYMEX which allows incorporating specially exclude dispersal (Parry et al., 2011).

DYMEX based B. tryoni population dynamics model has been developed (Yonow et

al., 2004), but the focus of that model, was on existing data (e.g. Fletcher, 1975,

1979), from the temperate parts of B. tryoni’s distribution. The model primarily

focuses on the impacts of seasonal weather variation on population dynamics, with

host availability and quality parameters held constant (Yonow et al., 2004).

Muthuthantri et al. (2010) demonstrated that the model used by Yonow et al.(2004)

has very poor predictive powers in tropical and subtropical parts of the range of B.

tryoni and suggested that fruit quality and availability were more likely to drive

population dynamics than temperature. Muthuthantri (2008) modified the original

model of Yonow et al.(2004) to allow host numbers to vary with time, but all hosts

were considered equally suitable for larval development. This thesis has

demonstrated that host quality should be incorporated into any model of B. tryoni

population dynamics. In this chapter I use differential host quality as a larval

mortality parameter and, primarily, I investigate the sensitivity of modelled B. tryoni

population dynamics to differences in host quality. Secondarily, I apply the model to

various hypothetical host quality and host availability scenarios based around

Mundubbera, an agricultural region of south-east Queensland.

DYMEX uses real weather data, and so runs of a DYMEX model require the model

to be parameterised for a specific locality. The areas used in this chapter are Cairns,

located in tropical northern Queensland, and Mundubbera, a subtropical citrus

growing area located in south-east Queensland. Cairns was used to test model

sensitivity to host quality related larval mortality because it is a tropical district for

which climate is considered optimal for the fly (Yonow & Suthurst, 1998), with host

the most likely factor contributing to local B. tryoni population dynamics

(Muthuthantri, 2008). Mundubbera is a subtropical agricultural area in which citrus,

mango and table-grapes are grown commercially, while loquat, cherry-guava and

mulberry (all B. tryoni hosts) are grow non-commercially in suburban gardens and as

road-side trees (Lloyd et al., 2010). This district is subject to an area-wide

management program for B. tryoni that aims to protect of the commercial citrus

orchards. One of the major off-crop components of the area-wide scheme is the

control of flies breeding in non-commercial fruit, which is based on an assumption

Page 142: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

118

that such fruit are a major source of flies entering the commercial crops (Lloyd et al.,

2010). Indeed, controlling flies in non-commercial crops is a general

recommendation of many area-wide fruit fly management programs (Vreysen et al.,

2007), although the actual impact of such fly sources to regional fly populations is

rarely documented. The purpose of this chapter is not to try and mimic the

population phenology of B. tryoni in the Mundubbera area, but to utilise real fruit

abundance and quality data from Mundubbera as a guide to determining how fruit of

different quality and abundance may influence a local fruit fly population.

6.2 METHODS

6.2.1 General approach

For the modelling of B. tryoni population dynamics using DYMEX, the following

components will be described in this methodology section: (i) general overview of

DYMEX for modelling natural systems; (ii) summary of the original B. tryoni

DYMEX model developed by Yonow et al. (2004); (iii) summary of the

Muthuthantri (2008) modification of the B. tryoni model which incorporated fruit

abundance as a variable; and (iv) further modification of the B. tryoni model to

incorporate host quality differences as measured by changes in larval mortality. This

final point is the major task of this chapter.

Using the final modified model, the following issues are further covered: (i)

Describing how a host quality related larval mortality parameter was incorporated

into the model; (ii) description of a sensitivity analysis to determine the sensitivity of

the model to increasing larval mortality due to changing host quality; and (iii) model

runs for different host utilisation scenarios in Mundubbera to predict the population

dynamics of B. tryoni in response to differences in both host abundances and quality.

6.2.2. DYMEX modelling

DYMEX® is a process-based, modular modelling software package for the

development of cohort-based, life-cycle models. Many internal (e.g. within a life

cycle) and external (e.g. environmental) processes can be incorporated into a model,

each affecting the different life-stages within an organism’s life-cycle, so

determining the survival, age and physiological status of individuals within a cohort

(where a cohort is a group of individuals of a user-defined starting size and age [e.g.

Page 143: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

119

100 eggs]). The DYMEX package contains a module library which allows a model

builder to select and link modules which best describes their organism’s life-cycle,

while minimising the amount of back-ground programming required (Maywald et

al., 1999).

The DYMEX life-cycle module consists of two or more life stages (e.g. egg, larvae,

pupa,adult) and each life stage has one or more processes (e.g. mortality,

development, reproduction) acting upon it (Maywald, 1999). These processes are

driven by external (e.g. temperature, rainfall) and internal (e.g. density) variables.

The way in which each life stage is affected by these variables is determined by user-

set functions (e.g. a response curve) or parameters (e.g. upper and lower temperature

thresholds). The variables driving a cohort through each life stage (i.e. influencing

the survival, development, mortality and reproduction of individuals) come from

other DYMEX modules, such as the meteorological data module and soil moisture

module. A module can have multiple tasks (e.g. Meteriological data influences all

life stages) or a specific task (e.g. soil moisture module may only affect soil dwelling

pupae), and the output of one module can be an input to one or more other modules.

Once all individuals within a cohort complete one life stage (e.g. caterpillars

accumulate sufficient day degrees to complete a larval instar) then all surviving

members of the cohort are transferred to the next life stage. The information

required for setting functions, parameters and other necessary variables within a

model are, ideally, sourced from prior research work but can, if needed, be estimated

through reiterative fitting of model output against real population phenology data.

6.2.2.1 Original B. tryoni DYMEX model (Yonow et al., 2004)

A B. tryoni population model using DYMEX was developed by Yonow et al. (2004).

The dynamics of the model were primarily driven by location specific daily

meteorological data (i.e. temperature, rainfall, soil moisture, evaporation); thus the

population phenologies generated by this model are heavily biased by the influence

of climate. When validated against observed B. tryoni population data from

temperate Australia, the model produced significant correlations between observed

and predicted data (Yonow et al., 2004), inferring that processes driving population

dynamics (at least for temperate areas) had been accurately captured by the model.

However, when similar tests were run on the model using real B. tryoni population

Page 144: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

120

data from the tropics and sub-tropics, no significant correlations were found

(Muthuthantri et al., 2010). While hosts, both in their quality and seasonal

availability, are considered important variables affecting the population dynamics of

many fruit fly species (Hurtado et al., 1995; Tan & Serit, 1994), the model of Yonow

et al.(2004) model incorporated host only as a constant factor (i.e. it did not

influence the dynamics of the model). This led Muthuthantri (2008) and

Muthuthantri et al. (2010) to suggest that lack of host data was a serious weakness of

the model in environments where climate variables were not limiting (i.e. the tropics

and sub-tropics).

6.2.2.2 B. tryoni DYMEX model incorporating fruit number (Muthuthantri,

2008)

The ability of B. tryoni females to lay eggs is directly affected by host availability

(May, 1963). Further, the existence of larvae in fruit may affect oviposition choice

of female B. tryoni, as the presence of mature larvae negatively affects the

development of immature larvae (Fitt, 1984). Considering these points, in my

Masters thesis (Muthuthantri, 2008) I modified the original B. tryoni DYMEX model

so that fruit availability within a location changed and so could potentially influence

B. tryoni population growth through two life stages: larvae (via larval mortality) and

reproductive females (via progeny production). The fruit acceptability for

oviposition, and fruit suitability for larval development, was still held constant in this

version of the model.

6.2.2.3 Incorporating fruit quality related mortality into a B. tryoni model

Fruit quality is known to influence B. tryoni oviposition and offspring survival

(Balagawi et al., 2005; Bower, 1977), but the current literature does not provide any

information on how these traits might affect population dynamics of the fly. With

respect to the host environment, the influence of host on larval survival (i.e. a

measure of host quality) needs to be considered along with host availability (= host

abundance). As a final modification of Yonow et al. (2004) and Muthuthantri

(2008), I included a host quality effect by incorporating a new mortality parameter;

larval mortality due to host quality. The components of the final model used in this

thesis are illustrated in Figure 6.1, while the modules and parameters used in the

model are listed in Table 6.1.

Page 145: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

121

Figure 6.1: Life cycle diagram and the factors influencing life stages as developed in

the Bactrocera tryoni population model used in this thesis, and developed originally

from the model provided by Yonow et al. (2004).

Egg

Larvae

Reproductive male

Teneral male

Over wintering female

Reproductive female

Teneral Female

Pupae

Over wintering male

Daily meteorological data

Minimum temperature

Maximum temperature

Evaporation

Shallow soil moisture

Soil moisture Location specific

variables

Size of orchard

Number of trees in Orchard

Number of fruit per tree

Fruit environment

Fruit Quality

Page 146: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

122

Table 6.1: Individual modules of the DYMEX Bactrocera tryoni population model developed initially by Yonow et al. (2004).

Module Parameters considered Other modules using output

Timer Daily time step -

Meteorological data Daily maximum temperature Evaporation Daily minimum temperature Rainfall

Life cycle module (transferring to over wintering stage) Soil moisture module Daily temperature module Function module

Soil moisture Single layer soils moisture (90cm depth) Shallow soil moisture (top layer of soil)

Max. moisture storage, drainage rate, Evapotranspiration coefficient Moisture level

Life cycle module (adult mortality) Life cycle module (pupal mortality)

Daily temperature cycle Daily minimum temperature Daily maximum temperature (sourced from Meteorological data)

Life cycle module (Egg, larvae, pupae, teneral and adult mortality and development) Life cycle (progeny production)

Location specific variables Area of orchard (in hectares) Number of fruits per hectare Number of fruits per tree Fruit suitability for larval development Fruit acceptability for oviposition

Function module (available fruit) Function module (available fruit) Function module (available fruit) Life cycle module (Larval mortality) Life cycle module Progeny production)

Function module (activity index) Rainfall Life cycle module (Reproduction of female)

Equation and expression module (available fruit)

Area of orchard* number of fruit trees per*number of fruit per tree

Life cycle module (Larval mortality)

Life cycle [See Table 6.2 for full details]

Page 147: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

123

Table 6.2: Detailed components of the life cycle module of the DYMEX Bactrocera tryoni population model developed by Yonow et al. (2004)

and subsequently modified in this thesis.

Function Dependent variable Independent variable Parameter threshold

values Rate/ Proportion

Function shape

Egg development Physiological development rate

Daily temperature cycle

11.1°C 0.0382 Linear above threshold

Egg establishment mortality 9% NA Constant

Egg establishment mortality Egg mortality Larval density 10 larvae/fruit cause 50% mortality

0.5 Logistic

Egg continuous mortality Egg mortality Daily temperature cycle

2°C (lower threshold) 32°C (upper threshold)

- 0.1354 0.1706

Linear below threshold Linear above threshold (nil between thresholds)

Egg to larva transfer Stage transfer Physiological age 1 1 Step

Larval development Physiological development rate

Daily temperature cycle

10°C 0.0061 Liner above threshold

Larval establishment mortality 15.3% NA Constant

Larval establishment mortality Larval mortality Larval density 18 larvae/fruit cause 50% mortality

2 Logistic

Larval establishment mortality Larval mortality Daily temperature cycle

1°C 0.0003 & - 0.0105

Polynomial function

Larval continuous mortality Larval mortality Larval density 2 Logistic

Larval continuous mortality NA NA 0-1 Fruit suitability Index

*Larval continuous mortality NA Host quality 0-0.4 Constant

Larva to pupa transfer Stage transfer Physiological age 1 1 Step

Page 148: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

124

Pupal development Physiological development rate

Daily temperature cycle

11.2°C 0.0061 Linear above threshold

Pupal establishment mortality 22% Constant

Pupal continuous mortality Pupal mortality Daily temperature cycle

5°C (lower threshold) 31°C (upper threshold)

-0.025 0.0457

Linear below threshold Linear above threshold (nil between thresholds)

Pupal continuous mortality Pupal mortality Shallow Soil moisture 50% (lower threshold) 90 % (upper threshold)

0.5 5

Quadratic below threshold

Pupa to teneral male/ female transfer Stage transfer Physiological age 1 1 Step

Teneral, reproductive male/ female and over wintering male/ female continuous mortality

Fly age (maturation) Daily temperature cycle

12.31°C 0.0108 Linear above threshold

Teneral, reproductive male/ female and over wintering male/ female continuous mortality

Mortality Fly age 1 1 Step

Teneral, reproductive male/ female and over wintering male/ female continuous mortality

Mortality Daily temperature cycle

36°C (upper threshold) -2°C (lower threshold)

0.125 -0.667

Linear above threshold Linear below threshold (nil between threshold)

Teneral, reproductive male/ female and over wintering male/ female continuous mortality

Mortality Rainfall 40mm 0.00333 Linear above threshold

Over wintering (teneral/reproductive male and female)

Over wintering Daily Maximum temperature

18°C 1 Step general

Teneral to reproductive stage (male and female)

Stage transfer Physiological age 1 1 Step

Transfer from over wintering stage Stage transfer

Physiological age

Days>18

1

1 day

1

1

Step

Step

Reproduction (reproductive female) Egg production Fecundity per female 1400 NA NA

Reproduction (reproductive female) Egg production Maximum number of eggs/ day/ female

80 NA NA

Page 149: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

125

Reproduction (reproductive female) Egg production Daily temperature cycle

26°C 1.3 2 segment Linear

Reproduction (reproductive female) Egg laying Larval density 12 0.6 Logistic

Reproduction (reproductive female) Egg laying Fruit acceptability NA 0-1 Index

Reproduction (reproductive female) Activity index NA NA NA Direct

* represents the host quality related larval mortality factor incorporated in this chapter.

Page 150: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

126

Larval mortality due to host quality is the focus of the model modification in this

chapter. Host quality (hq), as referred in this chapter, is the number of B. tryoni

pupae emerging compared to the initial number of eggs laid into a fruit. The

assumption is that fly emergence is reduced from the number of eggs laid due to the

fruit quality related factors, such as fruit chemistry or morphology. The greater the

difference between the number of eggs initially laid and the number of flies

emerging, the poorer the host quality. In this study, larval mortality due to host

quality (hq) is denoted as Lhq. In the model Lhq is an index value, starting at 0 (for

the ideal fruit, no larval mortality) and increasing to 1 (the very worst fruit, 100%

larval mortality). For different runs of the model, the Lhq was a constant for one

host fruit species or variety.

Incorporating host quality related larval mortality (i.e. Lhq) into the model was done

in the following manner. There were two larval mortality types in Yonow et al.’s

(2004) original model: these being establishment mortality and continuous mortality.

Fifteen percent establishment mortality occurs initially and, after that, continuous

larval mortality occurs. Continuous mortality is the daily larval mortality (Ldm)

occurring inside the fruit, and this is driven by daily temperature cycle (Lt), larval

density (Lld) and fruit suitability (Lfs) (Yonow et al., 2004). Note that the Lfs did

not alter under the Yonow et al. version of the model, and I also chose to keep it a

constant variable. Instead, I inserted host quality related mortality (Lhq) as a new

variable into the Ldm calculation. The daily larval mortality was thus calculated as

𝐿𝑑𝑚 = 1 − [( 1 − 𝐿𝑡) × (1 − 𝐿𝑙𝑑) × (1 − 𝐿𝑓𝑠) × (1 − 𝐿ℎ𝑞)]

6.2.3 Sensitivity analysis

6.2.3.1 Data files

Methodological data from Cairns (16°9’S, 145°7’E), Queensland, Australia were

used to test the model sensitivity to host quality related larval mortality. The

meteorological data used for this study was from January 1952 to December 1953, to

allow comparison with the work published in Muthuthantri (2008) and Muthuthantri

et al., (2010). The historical nature of the time period is irrelevant to the sensitivity

Page 151: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

127

analysis being carried out; any time period is suitable. The daily meteorological data

(minimum and maximum temperatures and rainfall) were obtained from the SILO

Data Drill (http://www.nrme.qld.gov.au/silo).

6.2.3.2 Model sensitivity analysis

For sensitivity analysis, the only host (or other) variable altered was ‘host quality

related larval mortality’ (Lhq). Sensitivity analysis was done by differing Lhq in the

model and seeing if the number of larvae and reproductive females changed. Host

quality related larval mortality (Lhq) values used were 0.1, 0.15, 0.2, 0.25, 0.3, 0.35

and 0.4, with one-hundred reproductive females used as the starting cohort. Above a

Lhq value of 0.4 the population become extinct, so the sensitivity analysis did not

include Lhq > 0.4. The variables ‘fruits per tree’, ‘trees per hectare’ and ‘orchard

size’ were arbitrarily set at 50, 250, and 2 ha, respectively, and left constant for all

model runs.

Results of the sensitivity analysis are presented in two ways. One is by presenting

the larval and reproductive female population curves produced with the changing

parameter values from Lhq = 0.1 to Lhq = 0.4. Each graph shows two panels in the Y

axis, where panel 1 is the total larval number and panel two is the total reproductive

female number, while the x-axis is the month of the year. The second presentation

of the sensitivity analysis is a statistical comparison of the mean numbers of

reproductive female produced from model runs using the different Lhq values.

Means were compared using one - way ANOVA, with Tukey’s LSD used as the post

hoc test. For each run of the model using a different Lhq value, the data used in the

ANOVA was the daily number of reproductive females present in the population

from day 30 through to day 59 (inclusive) of the model run. The 30 daily counts

thus generated were used as the input data for that particular Lhq ‘treatment’ in the

ANOVA (Appendix 1).

Page 152: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

128

6.2.4 Hypothetical host utilization scenarios developed for Mundubbera

6.2.4.1 Meteorological data

Mundubbera (25°36'S & 151°18'E) was used as a location to estimate B. tryoni

population fluctuations resulting from different scenarios of host quality and

abundance. Mundubbera is a subtropical production site for which there is detailed

information on the seasonal abundance of different B. tryoni hosts, the result of an

area-wide fruit fly management program run in the district (Lloyd et al., 2000, 2007,

2010). The meteorological data used for my model simulation runs was from 1996 –

1998, with daily meteorological data (minimum and maximum temperatures and

rainfall) obtained from the SILO Data Drill (http://www.nrme.qld.gov.au/silo).

6.2.4.2 Fruit data for different host utilization scenarios

Host quality

Host quality of the common host fruit available in Mundubbera; loquat (Eriobotriya

japonica), mulberry (Morus alba), cherry guava (Psidium litorale) and mango

(Mangifer aindica) were assessed in a preliminary experiment (Appendix 2) and the

results used as a guide to rank different host quality related larval mortality (Lhq)

under different host utilization scenarios. Lhq was calculated based on pupal

emergence of different quality hosts in the following manner.

While theoretically Lhq ranges from 0 to 1, model runs for the sensitivity analysis

(see Results) showed that populations died out at Lhq values > 0.4. Given this model

limitation, a value of Lhq = 0.4 was the maximum that could be set to explore

different host quality/host abundance scenarios. In order to try and capture the

different host qualities of my fruit, while still getting the model to run, I thus scaled

the Lhq values so they were within the 0.0 – 0.4 limits. If pupal emergence from a

given fruit host is x%, then larval mortality is assumed to be (100 -x) %. In order to

get this percentage of larval mortality within the range of Lhq = 0.0 - 0.4, the

following calculation was performed.

𝐿ℎ𝑞 = 0.4 × (100−𝑥)100

and used this value in my subsequent model runs.

Page 153: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

129

When preparing fruit data files for different host utilization scenarios, fruiting

phenology was estimated based on fruit penology data from Mundubbera. The

fruiting phenology data were sourced from fruit collections made during the area

wide management program in Mundubbera run from 2003 to 2007 (Lloyd et al.

2000, 2007, 2010). The number of fruits of a genus (e.g. Citrus) and non-citrus fruit

species (e.g. Eriobotrya japonica) collected per month was avaraged across years:

this data is presented in Figure 6.2. The fruit phenology data for Munduberra shows

that the citrus season occurs from April to August (i.e. late autumn to winter), while

in the Spring, citrus availability is low and mulberry, cherry guava and loquat

become abundant. A low level of citrus can be found outside the Winter months.

As the model uses as input data the number of fruit available per tree per day, the

field fruit data (i.e. Fig. 6.2) could not be used directly as the input data file. Rather,

the fruiting phenology data illustrated in Fig. 6.2 was taken as a guide to decide the

relative fruit abundance of different hosts (e.g. citrus vs. non citrus) in Mundubbera

and the host data files were prepared accordingly. Detail of the host data files used

for each host utilization scenario are described under each hypothetical host

utilization scenario (see below).

Month

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Mea

n fr

uit n

umbe

r

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

Figure 6.2: Phenology of different fruit fly host fruits in Mundubbera SE QLD. Citrus

Cherry guava Carambola Persimmon Loquat Mango Mulberry

Page 154: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

130

6.2.4.3 Hypothetical host utilization scenarios developed for Mundubbera

In order to apply the B. tryoni population model for different host utilization

scenarios in Mundubbera, different hypothetical scenarios were developed. In all

hypothetical environments it was assumed that: (i) there was only one host type

available per simulation; (ii) all reproductive females produced in the environment

were from this host species; and (iii) no dispersal occurred. These were restrictions

imposed by the model, which in its current form only allows for one fruit type per

run. The initiating cohort for a model run was set as one reproductive female, and all

host fruit utilization scenarios were run from January 1996 to December 1997

inclusive. The inability to currently model sequential host use within a year (i.e. as

fruits come in and out of season) is a serious weakness of the model and one which

needs to be overcome if true predictive population modelling is to be attempted.

Scenario 1: Citrus fruit only available in the system

In this hypothetical environment only citrus trees were available for fruit fly

breeding. Citrus fruits were highly abundant in orchards during the commercial

season from April to September, while outside the main citrus season any fruits

collected were mainly from a very small number of low yielding feral and back yard

trees (Fig. 6.2). To generate the phenology data file neither the number of trees per

hectare (set at 158 trees/ha) nor was land size (set at 10ha) varied. Rather, the

number of fruits per tree was changed over time to generate a fruiting phenology

pattern that reflected the field data presented in Fig. 6.2 (Appendix 3a). Host quality

differences among citrus types was not considered in this scenario and, based on the

data in Chapter Two of approximately 20% pupal emergence from citrus, the Lhq

(citrus) was calculated (using the formula in section 6.2.4.2) as 0.32.

Scenario 2: Citrus phenology but good quality host

In this hypothetical environment the fruiting penology and abundance of the host

was identical to Scenario 1 (Appendix 3b), but the host was of better quality with an

assumption that average pupal emergence rate was 70% and hence Lhq (better host) =

0.12.

Page 155: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

131

Scenario 3:Non-citrus fruits only available in the system

In this hypothetical environment only the non-citrus fruiting trees, such as mulberry,

loquat and cherry guava were available. Many of these fruit are outside the main

citrus season (Fig.6.2). These fruit trees are generally not grown on a commercial

scale, but can found along the roadside or in backyards. The number of such trees in

Mundubbera are much lower than citrus (Lloyd et al., 2010), however, these fruits

are high quality hosts for B. tryoni in comparison to citrus (Appendix 2) and

sometimes the number of fruit per tree can also be very high (e.g. mulberry). The

fruit data file was generated so that number of trees was lower per unit land area, but

the number of fruits per tree was higher than in Scenarios 1 & 2 (Appendix 3c). In

my laboratory trials the non-citrus host trees all show very low juvenile mortality

compared to initial eggs laid into fruits (Appendix 2), with an average of 70% pupal

emergence across the different fruit types. Thus average pupal emergence of these

fruits were taken as 70% and Lhq was calculated and set at 0.12. For modelling

purposes different non - citrus fruit types were, treated as one fruit type. The

phenology of this fruit is showed in Fig. 6.3.

[The data in appendix 2 shows ~100% emergence only for mulberry – the other three

are around 50-75% emergence. For each host utilization scenario, the population

curve for the number of reproductive females and the fruit phenology curves are

illustrated graphically (Fig.6.5).

6.3 RESULTS

6.3.1 Sensitivity analysis

As Lhq increased, the predicted number of larvae and reproductive females

decreased, although the phenology patterns remained very similar (Fig. 6.3 A- F).

From Lhq = 0.1 to Lhq = 0.35 there was continuous larval and adult production

throughout the two year run period of the model (Fig.6.3 A- F), however, at Lhq =

0.4 larval production declined to zero in the spring of the first year and the

population died out (Fig.6.3 G). Model runs at Lhq > 0.4 failed to run, or populations

Page 156: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

132

died out within a few generations (data not presented), clearly showing the

sensitivity of the model to hosts of poor quality.

6.3.1.1 Mean reproductive female number with respect to Lhq

The mean number of reproductive females produced between day 30 and day 59 of

each model run at different Lhq values were significantly different from each other

(F182, 188 = 7736.9, p < 0.001) (Fig.6.4). This analysis similarly confirms the

sensitivity of B. tryoni populations to variation in host quality.

Page 157: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

133

Page 158: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

134

Figure 6.3: Predicted population phenology of Bactrocera tryoni using a modified

DYMEX model initially presented by Yonow et al. (2004). Each figure part consists

of two panels, where the upper panel is the predicted larval number, and the lower

panel the predicted number of reproductive females. Each figure part varies only

from the others in the model parameter Lhq (= larval mortality due to host quality).

Increasing Lhq represents hosts of decreasing suitability for B. tryoni off-spring

survival. The Lhq values are (A) Lhq = 0.1, (B) Lhq = 0.15, (C) Lhq = 0.20, (D) Lhq

= 0.25, (E) Lhq = 0.30, (F) Lhq = 0.35, (G) Lhq = 0.40. Note that for each figure part,

while the x-axis is constant, the y-axis is variable.

Page 159: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

135

L(hq)

0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3 0.35 0.4

Rep

rodu

ctiv

e fe

mal

es

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

a

b

c

de

f g

Figure 6.4: Predicted daily mean (±SE) number of Bactrocera tryoni reproductive

females produced from days 30-59 inclusive of a modified DYMEX B. tryoni

population model initially presented by Yonow et al. (2004). Each column is the

output of a different model run, where the only difference between the runs was the

Lhq (= larval mortality due to host quality) value. Increasing Lhq represents hosts of

decreasing suitability for B. tryoni off-spring survival.

6.3.2 B. tryoni host utilization scenarios

Scenario1: Citrus fruits only in the system

With citrus only in the system, the fly populations declined to zero by the end of the

first year of the simulation (Fig 6.5A). Given the high Lhq value of citrus, this is in

agreement with the findings of the sensitivity analysis.

Scenario 2: Citrus phenology but good host quality

With plentiful, high quality hosts available, the number of reproductive females built

up in the population, even through fruits were most common during the cooler

winter months. An absence of fruit was reflected by a (lagged) decline of female

Page 160: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

136

numbers during the summer months. In year 1 (i.e. 1996) of the simulation there

was a dramatic drop, and then rise, in reproductive female numbers in August (Fig.

6.5 B). This reflects the effect of a critical lower threshold temperature value on

model output, with the model predicting reproductive females would enter a

diapausing state (and so become non-reproductive) at this time. An almost

immediate increase in temperature above the threshold, leads to these same females

re-entering the cohort of ‘reproductive’ females.

Scenario 3:Non-citrus fruits only available in the system

With high quality hosts available, predominantly in the summer and autumn months,

the fly population increased over time. In contrast to Scenario 2, when good quality

hosts were available predominantly only in winter, the availability of good quality

hosts in the warmer months in Scenario 3 led to higher total abundance of flies, than

Scenario 2 even though host abundance in the area was less than in Scenario 2 (Fig.

6.5 C).

Page 161: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

137

Figure 6.5: Predicted population phenologies of Bactrocera tryoni using a modified

DYMEX model initially presented by Yonow et al. (2004). Each figure part consists

Page 162: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

138

of two panels, where the upper panel is the predicted number of reproductive

females, and the lower panel the abundance of host fruit. Each figure part varies

from the others in the abundance of host fruit (figure parts A &B the same, differ

from part C), or the model parameter Lhq (= larval mortality due to host quality).

Increasing Lhq represents hosts of decreasing suitability for B. tryoni off-spring

survival. The Lhq values are (A) Lhq = 0.32, (B) Lhq = 0.08, (C) Lhq = 0.004. Note

that for each figure part, while the x-axis is constant, the y-axis is variable.

Page 163: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

139

6.4 DISCUSSION

Using a modification of the DYMEX model developed by Yonow et al. (2004), the

population dynamics of B. tryoni have been shown to be highly sensitive to changes

in larval host quality (as assessed through its impact on off-spring survival) (Figs.

6.3 & 6.4). When different quality host utilization scenarios are considered, the

availability of a good quality hosts is seen to be critical for continuous population

growth. Poor quality hosts, even when abundant in the environment, cannot sustain

B. tryoni populations (Fig.6.5a). In contrast, even relatively low numbers of high

quality fruit can produce very large populations of flies (Fig 6.5c).

The maximum Lhq value obtained from sensitivity analysis, before populations

started going to extinction, was Lhq = 0.4. This value is far lower than the larval

mortality rates recorded in real citrus fruits in laboratory experiments (Chapter 2).

The question is then why does the model fail to generate ongoing populations when

host related larval mortality is still quite low? The likely reasons for this are other

sources of mortality in the model that, act on the larval stages (e.g. the establishment

mortality), or other life stages, (Table 6.2). The cumulative effect of different

mortalities thus causes rapid extinction of the modelled populations, even when the

hosts would still be considered of moderate quality, causing only 40% offspring

mortality. This point reinforces the issue of just how much host quality may affect

field populations. If offspring mortality in different hosts is >95% (Chapter 2), then

a field population needs to suffer almost no other mortality before extinction is likely

to occur. It is important to note here that host quality is not suggested to bethe most

important factor affecting field populations of B. tryoni. The sensitivity analysis I

performed in this study assessed the sensitivity of the model to only one parameter

(i.e. Lhq). It did not test if this was the parameter the model was most sensitive to,

nor the effects of different parameters on model output. The sensitivity of the model

to host quality was done within the context of the larger thesis (i.e. understanding B.

tryoni citrus host use), not as a way of better understanding all factors driving B.

tryoni populations, or the DYMEX population model derived byYonow et al. (2004).

In a cropping system there are many environmental factors affecting the population

dynamics of fruit flies, including climate, other fruit fly individuals and parasites

Page 164: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

140

(Aluja & Mangan, 2008). Based on the analysis of this chapter, host quality should

also be considered a factor that influences population dynamics. However, in a

natural environment, there are likely to be multiple host fruit species occurring at the

same time, with each possessing different host qualities which may increase or

decrease the population size and growth rate of B. tryoni. Such variation was not

captured by my model, in which only one host, of the same host quality, was

available throughout the year. Given this limitation, it is necessary to develop the

model further so as to incorporate the availability of a range of hosts of different

quality hosts at different times of the year in order to accurately model the influence

of host quality on the population dynamics of B. tryoni. Alternatively, if multiple

host species are available in the system, but they have the same or similar host

quality, then the existing model may be sufficient for modelling purposes.

In terms of field management, the results have significant implications. In

Mundubbera, citrus is the main winter crop. Citrus is a poor quality host, and in

combination with its main abundance in the cooler season, the model predicted that

local populations would rapidly become extinct when utilising this host alone

(Scenario 1). However, there are other high quality fruits in the district (Fig. 6.2,

Appendix 2) and these are available, even if at only low numbers, during the citrus

season. Results show that these good quality hosts could maintain continuous B.

tryoni populations even when at relatively low fruit abundance levels (Scenario 3,

Fig 6.5). These hosts can maintain or increase the fly populations and act as

alternate hosts from summer, through winter and into spring. Thus, as the current

area-wide management strategy recommends, it is necessary to control fruit flies on

these less common, but high quality hosts. Indeed, the model strongly suggests, in

terms of total local population, that it is more important to manage flies on these

non-citrus hosts than it is on the commercial citrus.

Effect of the quality of host on immature B. tryoni survival is significant at

population level in a mechanistic model. However, model needs to further develop

so that it can incorporate different quality hosts at different time of the year and

verify the model with actual field population data.

This study started with the host use behaviour in relation to oviposition preference

and larval survival at individual fly level and proceeded to investigate the very fine

Page 165: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

141

detail of host related citrus peel physical and chemical properties impacted on its

larval survival. B. tryoni citrus host use was retested under field environment and

finally the impact of host quality on B. tryoni population was investigated. In the

next chapter, results obtained from research chapters will be integrated and discuss

possible implications and areas for further research.

Page 166: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

142

CHAPTER 7

General Discussion

7.1 Thesis summary

Yonow & Suthurst (1998) and Yonow et al. (2004) reported that the abundance and

dynamics of B. tryoni populations are primarily regulated by climatic variables, a

view based on extensive research of B. tryoni in temperate regions of eastern

Australia (Bateman, 1968; Fletcher, 1975, 1979; Yonow et al., 2004). This is in

contrast, however, to observations made in tropical and subtropical parts of eastern

Australia, where the availability of larval hosts have been postulated (without direct

testing) as the primary regulating factor for B. tryoni population dynamics (Drew et

al., 1984; Muthuthantri et al., 2010). The influence of host related factors on the fate

of individual B. tryoni, and hence on populations of the fly has been very poorly

researched (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Yonow et al., 2004). There are some studies

investigating fine details of B. tryoni host plant relationships in terms of oviposition

choice (Eisemann & Rice, 1985; Fitt, 1986 , Pritchard, 1969; Prokopy et al., 1999)

and larval survival (Balagawi et al., 2005; Bower, 1977; Fitt, 1984). There are also

studies that assess the abundance or phenology of hosts and correlate these factors

with changes in the abundance of the fly (Drew et al., 1984; Raghu et al., 2000).

However there are no unified studies for B. tryoni that simultaneously look at

preference/performance for particular hosts, the mechanisms underlying such

relationships, and then take that fine detailed work further by assessing the

implications of individual host use on the dynamics of emergent populations.

In this thesis I have addressed this question by investigating B. tryoni host utilization

behaviour of commercially important citrus grown in subtropical Queensland, at a

range of ecological and behavioural scales. Bactrocera tryoni adult oviposition

preference and immature survival were investigated through studies of individual fly

behaviour, while the mechanisms underlying host usage were elucidated through

morphological investigation of host peel and larval feeding biossays. This detailed

understanding of B. tryoni citrus host use patterns was confirmed with controlled

field experiments, and then extended through a mechanistic, cohort-based population

model to investigate the impacts of the differing host quality and abundance on the

fly’s population dynamics.

Page 167: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

143

The laboratory host preference/performance studies (Chapter 2) showed that female

B. tryoni exhibited significant oviposition preferences among citrus fruit types. Even

though the field study (Chapter 5) did not show such marked differentiation among

fruits, there were still significant differences in some aspects of host utilisation (e.g.

significantly larger clutch sizes in lemon). Even though B. tryoni is known as a

highly polyphagous fruit fly species (Fleture, 1989; Bateman, 1972), these results

raised questions about the nature of the polyphagy in B. tryoni and these are

elaborated on later in this chapter.

In addition to adult flies showing generally low oviposition preference for citrus

fruit, immature stage survival was also very poor in citrus (Chapter 2). Moreover,

larval survival rate is also significantly different across citrus types (Fig. 2.6 & Table

2.1). The study further explored the reason for such poor host status of B. tryoni

among citrus. In detailed studies (Chapters 3 and 4) I found that fruit peel is a major

influencing factor on the B. tryoni oviposition and larval survival in citrus. Citrus

peel physical factors such as peel toughness and oil gland density reduce the depth of

oviposition by adult flies, resulting in eggs being positioned at different depths

within the peel. Different parts of the citrus peel have different chemical and

physical micro environments, for example the flavedo has high concentrations of

peel oil while the albedo few or no chemicals (Chapter 3). The citrus peel chemicals

have a significant toxic effect on B. tryoni larvae and are an important mechanism

explaining poor larval survival in citrus fruit (Chapter 4). In my study all citrus

types except Murcott had B. tryoni eggs laid into the oil rich flavedo layer, resulting

in very low emergence of pupae from these fruits. In contrast with eggs deposited

into the albedo of Murcott mandarins, emergence of pupae from this fruit type was

significantly higher than the other citrus tested. The results of Chapters 3 and 4 have

important implications for breeding fruit resistant to fruit fly, and I also elaborate on

this point later in this chapter.

Oviposition preference and larval survival was significantly different not only

between species but also between varieties of the same species (Chapter 2). For

example, Navel and Valencia oranges had different chemical peel properties, which

were correlated with differential larval survival (Chapters 2 & 4). This indicates that

host use behaviour of B. tryoni adult and larvae can vary even at the level of fruit

Page 168: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

144

variety, a resulted previously found for this fly in tomatoes and apples (Balagawi,

2005; Bower,1977). However, this level of host use discrimination has not been

recognised in B. tryoni population models (Yonow et al., 2004; Muthuthantri, 2008),

where it has been assumed all fruit are used equally by the fly. My data strongly

infers that this would not be the case in real fruit utilization by B. tryoni in the field.

Furthermore, incorporating host quality related larval mortality into a B. tryoni

population model shows the phenology of predicted populations to be highly

sensitive to this variable (Chapter 6). Thus, an assumption that all hosts are equally

utilised by the fly in the field will lead to overestimation of population sizes, when

low quality hosts such as citrus are the most abundant host in the environment. The

implications of these findings for area-wide management of B. tryoni are discussed

at the end of Chapter 6.

There is very little published literature on B. tryoni to allow direct comparison of my

work on citrus, to other hosts utilised by the fly. Balagawi (2005) reported that B.

tryoni exhibited differential oviposition ranking and off-spring performance among

three tomato varieties, while Bower (1977) reported varying larval survival among

different apple varieties. These papers support my findings of differential host

patterns by B. tryoni among citrus fruits. In contrast, Fitt (1986) reported that B.

tryoni laid eggs equally in any fruit offered in the laboratory and that B. tryoni larvae

could develop successfully in all tested hosts; findings which he interpreted as

exemplifying the polyphagous nature of this species. As a key conclusion of my

thesis, I think the nature of what polyphagy means must be more closely examined,

not only through detailed laboratory studies, but also through field - work and the

indirect approaches offered by modelling. The issue of polyphagy is addressed in

the next section.

7.2 RESEARCH IMPLICATIONS

7.2.1 Resistance breeding for fruit flies Resistance to herbivores occurs naturally between both individuals and genetic

lineages of plant species (Aluja & Mangan, 2008; Scriber, 1984). The incorporation

of resistance mechanism, or selective breeding to enhance resistance has been used

in many commercial plant species to make those plants are less susceptible to pest

attack (Gogi et al., 2010; Hennessey & Schnell, 2001). As fruit flies are pests in

Page 169: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

145

which the adult flies initiate damage by laying eggs, and the feeding larvae cause

direct damage to the fruit, different mechanisms are available for plant resistance to

fruit flies by reducing or preventing adult fruit fly oviposition and/or by reducing

larval development and survival (Robinson & Hooper, 1989; Aluja & Mangan,

2008).

In mango, natural resistance to oviposition by both B. dorsalis and A. obliqua occurs

due to the peel toughness (even in ripe fruits) and by the secretion of resins that are

toxic to any eggs laid (Hennessey & Schnell, 2001; Rattanapun et al., 2009).

Similarly, papaya fruit produce chemicals that are toxic to the eggs of B. dorsalis, C.

capitata and B. cucurbitae (Seo & Tang, 1982; Seo et al., 1983). Bactrocera

cucurbitae were less attracted to bitter-gourd varieties with tough peel and an uneven

peel surface (Gogi et al., 2010). Host specific defence mechanisms such as these can

be utilized to reduce fruit susceptibility to fruit flies, an outcome that is clearly

beneficial for fruit growers. Because the major pest fruit fly species are both

polyphagous and have high dispersal capabilities, they are difficult to control using

standard on-farm controls (Lloyd et al., 2010) and so non-chemical pest management

methods such as developing resistant plant varieties is a potentially good option for

reducing infestation levels (Clarke et al., 2011a).

Citrus is a commercial crop with strong natural defence mechanisms against many

insects, including fruit flies (Bodenheimer, 1951). Citrus peel has been reported to

be resistant to ovipositor penetration by many fruit fly species (Aluja et al., 2003;

Greany, 1985; Greany et al., 1983; Jones, 1989). Some authors have shown that cell

compactness and a thick cuticle layer are the mechanisms responsible for resistance

to ovipositor penetration (Jones, 1989). Larval development is limited by peel

hardness, as it may limit larval mobility (Back & Pemberton, 1915; Leyva et al.,

1991). In this thesis, I have found that citrus peel toughness and oil gland density

significantly influence the amount of B. tryoni oviposition and the oviposition depth

into fruit (Chapters 2 and 3). To be of benefit to both fruit producers and consumers,

my study further revealed that brix level and fruit size were not related to

susceptibility or resistance of fruit. This means breeding for B. tryoni resistance

need not involve breeding for smaller fruit, or more sour fruit.

Page 170: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

146

Not only citrus peel physical traits are associated with the susceptibility of citrus to

fruit fly, but so are citrus peel chemical traits (Papachristos et al., 2008; Greany et

al., 1983). Fruit fly eggs laid into the oil rich flavedo layer suffer high mortality,

while eggs laid into largely oil less albedo suffer much lower mortality (Eskafi,

1988; Greany et al., 1983; Leyva et al., 1991). My study found similar results, as in

Murcott mandarins where eggs were laid into the albedo layer and showed high fly

emergence, while in contrast in other citrus types, where most eggs were placed into

oil rich flavedo, very few flies were produced (Chapters 2 and 3). The chemical

influence on B. tryoni larvae was confirmed in the larval feeding bioassays (Chapter

4.), in which citrus peel oils were confirmed as being highly toxic to B. tryoni larvae.

D - limonene was shown to be the main chemical fraction in citrus essential oil

responsible for B. tryoni larval death.

The results of my thesis can be used in developing B. tryoni resistant citrus varieties.

As discussed above, increasing peel toughness reduces both the clutch size and

oviposition depth of B. tryoni in citrus. Hence, increasing citrus peel toughness will

result in both (i) reduced total infestation and (ii) more eggs being laid into oil rich

flavedo layer causing greater offspring mortality. Moreover, high gland density

further reduces the ovipositor depth. Thus increasing citrus peel toughness and

increasing oil gland density are direct targets for selective breeding programs to

make citrus less susceptible. Not only physical factors, but also peel oil chemical

properties can be selected to improve the resistance of citrus tofruit fly infestation.

D - limonene is the essential oil fraction predominantly responsible for larval death

of B. tryoni. Thus increasing D - limonene content in the citrus peel oil may further

increase the peel resistance of citrus for B. tryoni larvae. It is important to note that

the increases in toughness, oil gland density and D - limonene required to make

citrus resistant to B. tryoni are not large – most of the citrus tested in my thesis are

already highly resistant to the fly. But for varieties such as mandarin, these specific

targets for selective breeding offer good opportunities with minimal, if any, impact

on consumer priorities, such as fruit size and sweetness.

Page 171: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

147

7.2.2 Host status and fly control

It has been widely assumed fact that all fruits in the host range of polyphagous fruit

flies are equally attractive and susceptible to fruit flies in the field environment

(Bernays & Chapman, 1994; Hanson, 1983; May & Ahmad, 1983). Such

assumptions lead to the formulation of fly management strategies for all hosts at an

equal level of intensity (Dhillon et al., 2005; Lloyd et al., 2010; Mau et al., 2007).

However, there are many research reports indicating that both polyphagous and

specialist fruit flies do not use all host species or host varieties equally (Clarke.R,

2005; Vargas et al., 1990). Despite being highly polyphagous, Bactrocera dorsalis

and B. invadens show preference hierarchies among mango varieties, which in itself

is not a good host for larvae (Rattanapun et al., 2009). Similarly B. musae, a

supposed banana specialist, does not utilize banana varieties equally (Mararuai,

2010). My study shows similar results in that B. tryoni does not oviposit

indiscriminately into oviposit into all citrus types and that larval host suitability

varies significantly. These results can be used in helping to formulate B. tryoni

control and market access protocols in citrus.

It is important to consider the different host preferences and susceptibilities of

polyphagous fruit flies in developing in-field management programs as the levels of

pest controls applied could be manipulated according to the host status for the fruit

fly. For example trapping is becoming a strategy for not only fruit fly monitoring,

but also fly control (Cohen & Yuval, 2000; Haniotakis et al., 1991; Navarro-Llopis

et al., 2008; Broumas et al., 2002). As fruit flies are likely to be most abundant in

orchards of preferred fruit, more traps could be hung in such orchards than in

orchards of less susceptible fruit (Vargas et al., 1990). Other fly management

strategies could also be applied on a more specific manner based on the flies’ host

use patterns. For example while chemical based pest management is becoming a less

popular pest management option, it is still important to use chemicals commensurate

to the need of the crop, with fewer sprays used for low pressure crops and more for

highly susceptible crops. Such understanding and application enhances the efficient

use of resources (i.e. capital, time, human resource) for pest control. A reverse

scenario also needs to be considered. Lloyd et al. (2010) developed protein bait

spray as an effective crop management tool on citrus, but we now know citrus to be a

crop with low susceptible to B. tryoni. Use of protein bait spray as a control option

Page 172: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

148

on more susceptible stone-fruit is failing to protect crops (J. Moore, Summer fruit

Australia Ltd, pers comm.). In this case the control methodology clearly needs to be

modified based on the susceptibility of the crop.

Market access protocols are another major limitation for farmers attempting to

access local and international markets (Clarke et al., 2011a). Commonly the

different host status of varieties within host species are not considered when

recommending the quarantine treatments required for market access

(http://www.dpi.vic.gov.au/agriculture/horticulture/moving-plants-products/About-

Plant-Quarantine-Manual/manual). Numerous cases exist where field host status

differences among citrus species and varieties are not considered in the quarantine

disinfestation process (De Lima et al., 2007; Grout et al., 2011; Heather et al., 1996).

My data show that while Queensland fruit fly will oviposit into different citrus types,

F1 offspring production from lemon, oranges and grapefruit are very low, and hence

the quarantine risk of such fruit being a source of an invasive fly population is very

low. Such host status differences need to be recognised officially and the differences

incorporated into market access risk reduction models on a cultivar by cultivar basis.

7.2.3 Bactrocera tryoni and the preference/performance relationship in

herbivorous insects

The preference/performance hypothesis (PPH) states that female insects should be

under directional selection to oviposit on substrates that maximise the growth,

survival and eventual reproductive capacity of their offspring (Craig & Itami, 2008;

Gripenberg et al., 2010; Jaenike, 1978; Thompson, 1988). In summary, the

hypothesis predicts a positive correlation between adult oviposition preference and

offspring performance (Clarke et al., 2011b). Tephritids are one of the insect groups

where the ovipositing adult has 100% control over the food host used by her

offspring. This is because, unlike some insect larval stages that are mobile and have

the ability to locate and discriminate between hosts (e.g. many lepidopteran

caterpillars) (Shikano et al., 2010), tephritid larvae are restricted to living inside the

single fruit piece selected by the adult (Fitt, 1986; Fletcher, 1989). Thus a positive

correlation between adult oviposition preference and larval host utilisation might be

predicted to be particularly important for tephritids.

Page 173: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

149

In the current study B. tryoni laid higher number of eggs into Murcott mandarin than

other citrus types, and from Murcott had the highest egg to pupal emergence rate,

highest pupal to adult emergence rate and higher fecundity in F1 generation: this

indicates a high preference/performance correlation. On the other hand, adult flies

also showed a strong oviposition preference for grapefruit, but from these fruits had

very low egg to pupal emergence and pupal to adult survival, with low fecundity in

the F1 generation. This indicates a negative preference/performance relationship and

the conflicting results indicate that larval survival was not always ‘optimised’ by the

adult female when laying into citrus.

Adult preference and larval performance relationships have shown both positive and

negative correlations in other tephritid species (Diaz-Fleischer & Aluja.M., 2003;

Fernandes da Silva & Zucoloto, 1993; Joachim-Bravo & Zucoloto, 1997; Lealonde

& Mangel, 1994; Nufio & Papaj, 2004). Ceratitis capitata had significantly higher

oviposition in ripe papaya over unripe papaya, with higher offspring performance in

ripe papaya; and greater preference for papaya over apple, with offspring

performance greater in papaya than apple (Joachim-Bravo et al., 2001b). In

laboratory trials on artificial substrates, A. obliqua showed higher oviposition

preference to a substrate containing protein over a substrate without protein, with

larval performance in former substrate significantly higher (Fernandes da Silva &

Zucoloto, 1993). Bactrocera dorsalis larval performance was greater in ripe and

fully ripe mango than in unripe mango, with adult oviposition preference positively

correlating with offspring performance (Rattanapun et al., 2009). However, these

positive preference/performance relationships are countered by documented negative

relationships. Rhagoletis juglandis and A. ludens both show preference for fruit

characters that are not most favourable for larval development (Diaz-Fleischer &

Aluja, 2003b, Nufio & Papaj, 2004, Ladonde & Mangel, 1994). B. tryoni has been

previously shown to exhibit negative preference/performance correlations (Fitt,

1986), while Balagawi et al. (2013) showed that both B. tryoni and Bactrocera

cucumis (French) showed positive and negative preference/performance correlations

depending on the species of host fruit tested.

Page 174: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

150

Implications for the general theory

Many phytophagous insect species show positive or negative

preference/performance correlations in their host use behaviour (Berenbaum &

Feeny, 2008; Friberg & Wiklund, 2009; Lamba et al., 2003; Nylin, 1996; Nylin &

Janz, 1996; Nyman et al., 2011; Videla et al., 2012). However, positive correlations

are more likely to be seen among specialists than generalists, with generalists more

likely to show a mix of strong and weak preference performance correlations among

different hosts within their host range (Liu et al., 2012; Mayhew, 1997; Shikano et

al., 2010; Wennström et al., 2010).

There are several reasons to consider why consistent preference performance

correlations are not seen in the host use behaviour of generalist herbivores (Craig &

Itami, 2008; Mayhew, 1997; Thompson, 1988). Polyphagous insects have a problem

processing the multiple sensory inputs coming from multiple host plants, due to the

limitation of receptor neurons in their bodies. This limits their neural ability to

identify good hosts from bad (Bernays, 2001). Another reason for poor

preference/performance correlations among generalist herbivores is related to the

genetics of the insect. It female oviposition preference and offspring performance

characteristics are inherited on separate loci, then they may well have separate

evolutionary pathways and thus adult oviposition preference need not match the

optimal hosts for offspring (Berenbaum & Feeny, 2008; Thompson, 1988; Wiklund,

1974). Preference/performance relationships can also be severely ‘unlinked’ when a

host shift is undertaken by the adult insect due to changed ecological conditions (e.g.

old host lost due to climatic changes, a new host introduced to an environment, or

when a poor larval host becomes very abundant in the environment) (Chew, 1977;

Legg et al., 1986; Wiklund, 1975). Generalist herbivores not rapidly adapting to

physiological or other changes happening in the host plant may also reduce the

strength of the preference and performance relationship. For example if a previously

good larval host becomes a poor larval host due to selection by some environmental

attribute affecting the plant but not the insect, then ‘bad’ host selection by the adult

insect may occur (Gripenberg et al., 2010).

My study adds to the growing body of literature (Balagawi et al., 2013; Clarke et al.,

2011b) that is failing to find consistency (either for or against) the PPH. In the case

Page 175: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

151

of my study it might be argued that rapid selection and modification of the citrus

hosts by humans for agriculture would almost certainly have broken any positive

relationships that were there, but agricultural plants have been used elsewhere to

support or deny the PPH (Gripenberg et al., 2010). What is perhaps most interesting

about the PPH and my study is the generally poor quality of citrus as hosts for B.

tryoni regardless of variety or species: my comparisons are thus more about ‘bad

versus worse’, rather than ‘good versus bad’. This reinforces the point stressed by

Balagawi et al. (2013) that much theoretical interpretation in this field is strongly

dictated by the host plants chosen for study by the experimenter, and that simply

changing the plants studied can change interpretation. In this context, the

mechanistic approach to understanding host use undertaken in this thesis is possibly

of greater long term benefit, than studies explicitly testing theoretical predictions of

host use patterns.

7.3 FURTHER RESEARCH

7.3.1 B. tryoni citrus host use behaviour in exotic vs. native citrus species

My thesis demonstrated an oviposition preference hierarchy among five selected

citrus types, and also showed overall low fly production from citrus. There are many

other Citrus species and other genera from the citrus family Rutaceae growing in

eastern Australia, the endemic range of B. tryoni. These include Australian natives

(e.g. C. australasica [finger lime], Acronychia spp [lemon aspens]) and other

commercial and non-commercial exotics (e.g. C. jambhiri [bush lemon], Fortunella

japonica [kumquat]). Many of these are published hosts for B. tryoni (Hancock et

al., 2000). For future studies, it would be worthwhile to explore whether host

utilisation differences and the generally low fly production patterns exhibited among

citrus types in my study remains consistent when other native and exotic Citrus

species and/or Rutaceae are studied. While identifying B. tryoni host use patterns

with other citrus types, it would also be good to further explore the underlying peel

physical and chemical properties influencing B. tryoni larval survival in these citrus

types.

Australia has six native species of Citrus (C. australasica, C. australis, C. indora, C.

garrowayi, C. maaideniana, C. glauca) (Flora of Australia On-line;

Page 176: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

152

http://www.anbg.gov.au/abrs/online-resources/flora/), none of which are recorded

hosts of B. tryoni (Hancock et al., 2000) despite most occurring in habitats where B.

tryoni occurs. Native host plants of herbivorous insects often have higher levels of

inherent pest defence mechanisms than do exotic species and new human modified

breeds (Aluja & Mangan, 2008). The lack of records of B. tryoni from native Citrus

species suggests that the local species may well be resistant to the fly. It would thus

be worthwhile to investigate the host use patterns and processes of B. tryoni on those

native species, as they may provide novel resistance mechanisms that could be

incorporated into commercial varieties.

7.3.2 Citrus peel chemical effects on B. tryoni larval survival

Of the six individual oil fractions (i.e. the monoterpene hydrocarbon group oil

factions) tested for impacts against B. tryoni larvae in this thesis, only D limonene

caused significant toxicity (Chapter 4). Yet the published data on citrus peel oil

effects on other species of tephritid larvae (Anastrepha, Ceratitis) showed that many

other oil fractions had significant toxic effects (Greany et al., 1983; Papachristos et

al., 2009; Salvatore et al., 2004). More specifically, the oxygenated monoterpene

group of peel oil fractions, such as linalool, citral and coumarin, were demonstrated

as more highly toxic to many tephritids than the monoterpene hydrocarbons. The

oxygenated monoterpene content of citrus oils declines with fruit ripening and is

reduced further during storage (Greany et al., 1983; Salvatore et al., 2004). As B.

tryoni can lay eggs into fruit at anytime from colour-change to harvest, some amount

of these chemicals should be presented in the peel when eggs are laid. Hence it is

important to study the effect of oxygenated monoterpenes on B. tryoni larval survival

to gain a complete understanding of the role of citrus peel chemicals on B. tryoni

larvae. Such new information could be used for pest management strategies

including development of organic pesticides, improving cultivars by selective

breeding, or manipulating harvesting time (i.e. harvest fruits at the maturity stage at

which peel still has high chemical resistance).

7.3.3 Improving B. tryoni population dynamics model to capture different hosts

in the same model

The modified B. tryoni population dynamics model used in this study can only

handle one host (quality and abundance) at a time, i.e. the model predicts fly

Page 177: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

153

phenology assuming only one host type is available through the year. For the

multivoltine, polyphagous B. tryoni, this is clearly an unrealistic and limiting

assumption, as different hosts of different quality and abundance may be available to

the fly simultaneously and/or sequentially throughout the year. Further development

of the model should therefore allow the incorporation of multiple hosts with different

host qualities, with fly cohorts able to show ‘preference’ between available hosts.

Such a model was an initial goal of this thesis, but the programming required was

beyond the scope of expertise available. However such a model, with the strong

integration of abiotic parameter variables initially developed by Yonow et al. (2004),

combined with realistic host plant parameters, has the potential to make realistic

predictions of B. tryoni population phenology. A good B. tryoni population model,

verified with real field data which is widely available, would be of major importance

in the long term sustainable management of this pest.

7.4 CONCLUSIONS

The series of experiments reported in this thesis quantified B. tryoni citrus host

utilization and identified the fine details of the underlying mechanisms that influence

those host use patterns. The completed research answered the questions posed at the

beginning of studies as follows:

- Bactrocera tryoni oviposition host preference varied significantly across

different citrus types.

- Immature B. tryoni host use varied across citrus types and the overall larval

host status of citrus for B. tryoni is very poor.

- The citrus peel physical properties of toughness and oil gland density, are the

main physical host attributes influencing B. tryoni oviposition preference and

oviposition depth.

- Citrus peel oil has significant negative effects on B. tryoni larvae

- Host quality plays a major role on B. tryoni population dynamics in tropical

and subtropical parts of the fly’s distribution.

Page 178: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

154

REFERENCES

Al Dakhil, M.A. & Morsy, T.A. (1999) The larvicidal activities of the peel oils of

three citrus fruits against Culex pipiens. Journal of the Egyptian

Parasitology, 29, 347-352.

Aluja, M., Diaz-Fleische, F., Papaj, D.R., Lagunes, G., & Sivinsky, J. (2001) Effects

of age, female density, and the host resources on egg load in Anastrepha

ludens and Anastrepha obliqua (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Insect

Physiology, 47, 975-988.

Aluja, M., Hurtado, H.C., Liedo, P., Cabrera, M., Castillo, F., Guillen, J., & Rios, E.

(1996) Seasonal populations and ecological implications for management

of Anastrepha fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in commercial mango

orchards in southern Mexico. Journal of Economic Entomology, 89, 654-

667.

Aluja, M. & Mangan, R.L. (2008) Fruit Fly (Diptera:Tephritidae) host status

determination: critical conceptual, methodological, and regulatory

considerations. Annual Review of Entomology, 53, 473-502.

Aluja, M., Pereze-Staples, D., Pinero, J., Mcperon, B., & Hernandez-ortiz, V. (2003)

Non host status of Citrus sinensis cultivar Valencia and C. paradisi

cultivar ruby red to Mexican Anastrepha fraterculus (Diptera:

Tephritidae). Journal of Economic Entomology, 96, 1693-1703.

Anonymous (1991) Effect of host fruit and larval density on development and

survival of Bactrocera sp. (Malaysian B) (Diptera: Tephritidae).

Pertanika, 14, 277-280.

Averill, A.L. & Prokopy, R.J. (1987) Residual activity of oviposition-deterring

pheromone in Rhagoletis pomonella (Diptera: Tephritidae) and female

response to infested fruit. Journal of chemical ecology, 13, 167-177.

Averill, A.L., Reissig, G.S., & Roelofs, W.L. (1988) Specificity of olfactory

responses in the tephritid fruit fly, Rhagoletis pomonella. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 47, 211-222.

Page 179: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

155

Back, E.A. & Pemberton, C.E. (1915) Susceptibility of citrus fruits to the attack of the

Mediterranean fruit fly. Journal of Agricultural Research, 3, 311-330.

Bahlaia, C.A., Weissb, R.M., & Hallett, R.H. (2013) A mechanistic model for a

tritrophic interaction involving soybean aphid, its host plants, and multiple

natural enemies. Ecological Modelling, 254 54-70.

Balagawi, S. (2006) Comparative ecology of Bactrocera cucumis (French) and

Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae) - understanding the

life history consequences of host selection and ovipostion behaviour, PhD

thesis, Griffith University, Brisbane.

Balagawi, S., Drew, R.A., & Clarke, A.R. (2013) Simultaneous tests of the

preference-performance and phylogenetic conservatism hypotheses: is

either theory useful? Arthropod-Plant Interactions, in press (DOI

10.1007/s11829).

Balagawi, S., Vijaysegaran, S., Drew, R.A.I., & Raghu, S. (2005) Influence of fruit

traits on oviposition preference and offspring performance of Bactrocera

tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae) on three tomato (Lycopersicon

lycopersicum) cultivars. Australian Journal of Entomology, 44, 97-103.

Bashir, H.A. & Abu-Bakr, A.A. (2003) Compositional changes during guava fruit

ripening. Food Chemistry, 80, 557-563.

Bateman, M.A. (1968) Determinants of abundance in a population of the Queensland

fruit fly. Symposium of the Royal Entomological Society of London, 4,

119-131.

Bateman, M.A. (1972) The ecology of fruit flies. Annual Review of Entomology, 17,

493-518.

Bateman, M.A. (1991) The impact of fruit flies on Australian horticulture

Horticultural Policy Council Report, No. 3. pp. 81: Canberra. Department

of Primary Industries.

Page 180: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

156

Berenbaum, M.R. & Feeny, P.P. (2008). Chemical mediation in host plant

specialization: the Papilionid paradigm. In Specialization, speciation, and

radiation: the evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects (ed. by K.

Tilmon). University of California Press.

Bernays, E.A. & Chapman, R.F. (1994) Host plant selection in phytophagous insects

Springer, New York.

Bernays, E.A. (2001) Neural limitations in phytophagous insects: implications for

diet breadth and evolution of host affiliation. Annual Review of

Entomology, 46, 703-727.

Berrigan, D.A., Carey, J.R., Guillen, J., & Celedonio, H. (1988) Age and host effects

on clutch size in the Mexican fruit fly, Anastrepha ludens. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 47, 73-80.

Berryman, A.A. (1999) Principles of population dynamics and their application.

Stanley Thornes, Cheltenham.

Bess, H.A., Haramoto.H, & Hinckley, A.D. (1963) Population studies of the oriental

fruit fly Dacus dorsalis Hendel (Diptera:Tephritidae). Ecology, 44, 197-

201.

Bierbaum, T. (1990) Host fruit chemical stimuli eliciting distinct ovipositional

responses from sibling species of Rhagoletis fruit flies. Entomologia

experimentalis et applicata,, 56, 165.

Birke, A., Aluja, M., P.D., G., Bigurra, E., Pereze-Staples, D., & Mcdonald, R.

(2006) Long aculeus and behaviour of Anastrepha ludens render

gibberellic acid ineffective as an agent to reduce 'Ruby red' grapefruit

susceptibility to the attack of this pestiferous fruit fly in commercial

groves. Journal of Economic Entomology, 99, 1184-1193.

Bodenheimer, F.S. (1951) Citrus entomology in the Middle East Academic

Publisher, S-Gravenhage.

Boller, E.F. & Prokopy, R.J. (1976) Bionomics and management of Rhagoletis.

Annual Review of Entomology, 21, 223-246.

Page 181: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

157

Bower, C.C. (1977) Inhibition of larval growth of the Queensland fruit fly, Dacus

tryoni (Diptera: Tephritidae) in apples. Annals of the Entomological

Society of America, 70, 97-100.

Brevault, T. & Quilici, S. (1999) Factors affecting behavioural responses to visual

stimuli in the tomato fruit fly, Neoceratitis cyanescens. Physiological

Entomology, 24, 333-338.

Broumas, T., Haniotakis, G., Liaropoulos, C., Tomazou, T., & Ragoussis, N. (2002)

The efficacy of an improved form of the mass-trapping method, forthe

control of the olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae (Gmelin) (Diptera,

Tephritidae): Pilot-scale feasibility studies. Journal of Applied

Entomology, 126, 217-223.

Burnett, W.C. & Jones, S.B. (1978) Influence of sesquiterpene lactones of Vernonia

(Compsitae) on oviposition preferences of Lepidoptera. American

Midland Naturalist, 100, 242-246.

Carey, J.R. (1984) Host spesific demographic studies of the Mediterranean fruit fly

Ceratitis capitata. Ecological Entomology, 9, 261-270.

Carey, J.R., Harris, E.J., & McInnis, D.O. (1985) Demography of a native strain of

the melon fly, Dacus cucurbitae, from Hawaii. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 38, 195-199.

Carle, S.A., Averill, A.L., Rule, G.S., Reissig, W.H., & Roelofs, W.L. (1987)

Variation in host fruit volatiles attractive to the apple maggot fly,

Rhagoletis pmonella. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 13, 795-805

Chan, H.T., Hansen, J.D., & Tam, S.Y.T. (1990) Larval diet from different protein

sources for Mediterranean fruit flies (Diptera:Tephritidae). Journal of

Economic Entomology, 83, 1954-1958.

Chapman, R.F. (2009). Foraging and food choice in phytophagous insects. In

Chemical Ecology (ed. by H. J.D.). Eolss Publishers, Oxford.

Page 182: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

158

Chew, F.S. (1977) Coevolution of pierid butterflies and their cruciferous food plants.

II. The distribution of eggs on potential food plants. Evolution, 31, 568-

579.

Christenson, L.D. (1960) Biology of fruit flies. Annual Review of Entomology, 5,

171-192.

Christenson, L.D., Shizuko, M., & Holloway, J.R. (1956) Substitution of dehydrated

for fresh carrots in medium for rearing fruit flies. Journal of Economic

Entomology, 49, 135-136.

Chua, T.H. (1991) Demographic parameters of Bactrocera sp. (Malaysian B)

(Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Plant Protection in the Tropics, 14,

277-280.

Clarke, A.R., Allwood, A.J., Chinajariyawong, A., Drew , R.A.I., Hengsawad, C.,

Jirasurat, M., Kong Krong, C., Kritsaneepaiboon, S., & Vijayasegaran, S.

(2001) Seasonal abundance and host use patterns of seven Bactrocera

macquart species (Diptera; Tephritidae) in Thailand and peninsular

Malaysia. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 49, 207-220.

Clarke, A.R., Armstrong, K.F., Carmichael, A.E., Milne, J.R., Raghu, S., Roderick,

G.K., & Yeates, D.K. (2005) Invasive phytophagous pests arising

through a recent tropical evolutionary radiation: The Bactrocera dorsalis

complex of fruit flies. Annual Review of Entomology, 50, 293-319.

Clarke, A.R., Powell, K.S., Weldon, C., & Taylor, P.W. (2011a) The ecology of

Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera: Tephritdae): what do we know to

assist pest management? Annals of Applied Biology, 158, 26-55.

Clarke, K.E., Hartley, S.E., & Johnson, S.N. (2011b) Does mother know best? The

preference–performance hypothesis and parent–offspring conflict in

aboveground–belowground herbivore life cycles. Ecological

Entomology, 36, 117-124.

Page 183: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

159

Cohen, H. & Yuval, B. (2000) Perimeter trapping strategy to reduce Mediterranean

Fruit Fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) damage on different host species in

Israel. Journal of Economic Entomology 93,721-725.

Cooley, S.S., Prokopy, R.J., McDonald, P.T., & Wong, T.T.Y. (1986) Learning in

oviposition site selection by Ceratitis capitata flies. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 40, 47-51.

Cornelius, M.L., Duan, J., & Messing, R.H. (2000) Volatile host fruit odors as

attractants for the oriental fruit fly (Diptera: Tephrtidae). Journal of

Economic Entomology, 93, 93-100.

Cornelius, M.L., Duan, J.J., & Messing, R.H. (1999) Visual stimuli and the response

of female oriental fruit flies to fruit mimicking traps. Journal of

Economic Entomology, 92, 121-129.

Courtney, S.P., Chen, G.K., & Gardner, A. (1989) A general model for individual

host selection. Oikos, 55, 55-65.

Craig, T.P. & Itami, J.K. (2008) Evolution of preference and performance

relationships. In Specialization, speciation, and radiation: the

evolutionary biology of herbivorous insects (ed. by K. Tilmon), pp. 20-

28. University of California Press, California.

Cytrynowicz, M., Morgante, J.S., & De Souza, H.M.L. (1984) Visual responses of

spoth American fruit flies and Mediterranean fruit flies to coloured

rectangles and spheres. Environmental Entomology, 11, 1202-1210.

De Lima, C.P.F., Jessup, A.J., Cruickshank, L., Walsh, C.J., & Mansfield, R. (2007)

Cold disinfestation of citrus (citrus spp.) for Mediterranean fruit fly

(Ceratitis capitata) and Queensland fruit fly (Bactrocera tryoni)

(Diptera: Tephritidae). New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural

Science, 35, 39–50.

Dethier, V.G. (1941) Chemical factors determining the choice of food plants by

Papilio larvae. American Naturalist, 756, 61-73.

Page 184: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

160

Dhillon, M.K., Singh., R., Naresh, J.S., & Sharma, H.C. (2005) The melon fruit fly,

Bactrocera cucurbitae: A review of its biology and management.

Journal of Insect Science, 5, 1-16.

Diaz-Fleischer, F. & Aluja, M. (2003a) Behavioural plasticity in relation to egg and

time limitation: the case of two fly species in the genus Anastrepha

(Diptera: Tephritidae). Oikos, 100, 125-133.

Diaz-Fleischer, F. & Aluja, M. (2003b) Clutch size in frugivorous insects as a

function of host firmness: the case of the tephritid fly Anastrepha ludens.

Ecological Entomology, 28, 268-277.

Diaz-Fleischer, F., Papaj, D.R., Prokopy, R.J., Norrbom, A.L., & Aluja, M. (2001).

Evolution of fruit fly oviposition behavior. In Fruit flies (Tephritidae)

phylogeny and evolution of behavior (ed. by M. Aluja & A.L.Norrbom),

pp. 811-841.

Díaz-Fleischer, F., Papaj, D.R., Prokopy, R.J., Norrbom, A.L., & Aluja, M. (2000).

Evolution of fruit fly oviposition behavior. In Fruit flies (Tephritidae):

phylogeny and evolution of behavior, pp. 811-842. CRC press.

Dirks, C.O. (1935) Larval production and adult emergence of the apple maggot fly in

relation to apple varieties. Journal of Economic Entomology, 28, 198-

203.

Donovan, T.M. & Weldon, C. (2002). Life tables, survivorship curves, and

population growth. In Spreadsheet excercises in ecology and evolution.

Sinauer associates,Inc, Sunderland, Massachusetts.

Dorji, C., Clarke, A.R., Drew, R.A.I., Fletcher, B.S., Loday, P., Mahat, K., Raghu,

S., & Romig, M.C. (2006) Seasonal phenology of Bactrocera minax

(Diptera: Tephritidae) in western Bhutan. Bulletin of Entomological

Research, 96, 531-538.

Drew, R.A.I., Prokopy, R.J., & Romig, M.C. (2003) Attraction of fruit flies of the

genus Bactrocera to coloured mimics of host fruit. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 107, 39-45.

Page 185: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

161

Drew, R.A.I. & Hooper, G.H.S. (1983) Population studies of fruit flies (Diptera:

Tephritidae) in south-east Queensland. Oecologia, 56, 153 - 159.

Drew, R.A.I., Zalucki, M.P., & Hooper, G.H.S. (1984) Ecological studies of eastern

Australian fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in their endemic habitat. I.

Temporal variation in abundance. Oecologia, 64, 267-272.

Duan, J.J. & Prokopy, R.J. (1992) Visual and odor stimuli influencing effectiveness

of sticky spheres for trapping apple maggot flies Rhagoletis pomonella

(Walsh) (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Applied Entomology, 113,

271-279.

Dukas, R., Prokopy, R.J., Papaj, D.R., & Duan, J.J. (2001) Egg laying behaviour of

Mediterranean fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae): Is social facilitation

important? Florida Entomologist, 84, 665-671.

Economopoulos, A.P. (1989) Use of traps based on color and /or shape. In Fruit

flies: Their bilogy, natural enemies & control (ed. by A.S. Robinson &

G. Hooper), Vol. 3B, pp. 315-327, Amasterdam.

Eisemann, C.H. (1989) Behavioural evidence for hydro - and mechanoreception by

ovipositor sensilla of Dacus tryoni (Diptera: Tephritidae). Physiological

Entomology, 14, 273-277.

Eisemann, C.H. & Rice, M.J. (1985) Oviposition behaviour of Dacus tryoni: the

effects of some sugars and salts. Entomologia Experimentalis et

Applicata, 39, 61-71.

Elson-Harris, M.M. (1988) Morphology of the immature stages of Dacus tryoni

(Froggatt) (Diptera:Tephritidae). Journal of Australian Entomological

Society, 27, 91-98.

Endo, N., Abe, M., Sekine, T., & Matsuda, K. (2004) Feeding stimulants of

Solanaceae-feeding lady beetle, Epilachna vigintioctomaculata

Page 186: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

162

(Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) from potato leaves. Applied entomology and

zoology, 39, 411-416.

Ero, M.M., Hamacek, E., & Clarke, A.R. (2011) Foraging behaviour of

Diachasmimorpha kraussii (Fullaway) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) and

its host Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae) in a nectarine

(Prunus persica (L.) Batsch var. nectarina (Aiton) Maxim) orchard.

Australian Journal of Entomology, 50, 234-240.

Eskafi, F.M. (1988) Infestation of citrus by Anastrepha spp. and Ceratitis capitata

(Diptera: Tephritidae) in high coastal plains of Guatemala.

Environmental Entomology, 17, 52-58.

Eskafi, F.M. & Kolbe, M.E. (1990) Infestation patterns of commonly cultivated,

edible fruit species by Ceratitis capitata and Anastrepha spp. (Diptera:

tephritidae) in Guatemala and their relationship to environmental

factors. Environmental Entomology, 19, 1371-1380.

Fay, H.A.C. (1988) The starter diet for mass rearing larvae of the Mediterranean fruit

fly, Ceratitis capitata. Journal of Applied Entomology 105, 496-501.

Fein, B.L., Reissig, G.S., & Roelofs, W.L. (1982) Identification of apple volatiles

attractive to the apple maggot, Rhagoletis pomonella. Journal of

Chemical Ecology, 8, 1473-1487.

Fernandes da Silva, P.G. & Zucoloto, F.S. (1993) The influence of host nutritive

value on the performance and food selection in Ceratitis capitata

(Diptera, Tephritidae). Journal of Insect Physiology, 39, 883-887.

Ferris, H. & Wilson, L.T. (1987) Concepts and principles of population dynamics. In

Vistas on Nematology (ed. by J.A. Veech & D.W. Dickson). Society of

Nematologists, Hyattsville.

Fitt, G. (1983) Factors limiting host range of Tephritid fruit flies, with particular

emphasis on the influence of Dacus tryoni on the distribution and

abundance of Dacus javisi, PhD thesis, University of Sydney, Sydney.

Page 187: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

163

Fitt, G. (1986) The role of adult and larval specializations in limiting the occurance

of five species of Dacus (Diptera: Tephritidae) in cultivated fruits.

Oecologia, 69, 101-109.

Fitt, G. (1989) The role of interspecific interactions in the dynamics of tephritid

populations. In Fruit flies: Their biology, natural enemies and control

(ed. by A.S. Robbinson & G. Hooper), pp. 281-301. Elsevier,

Amsterdam.

Fitt, G.P. (1984) Oviposition behaviour of two tephritid fruit flies, Dacus tryoni and

Dacus jarvisi, as influenced by the presence of larvae in the host fruit.

Oecologia, 62, 37-46.

Fletcher, B.S. (1975) Temperature-regulated changes in the ovaries of over wintering

females of the Queensland Fruit Fly, Dacus tryoni. Australian Journal

of Zoology, 23, 91-102.

Fletcher, B.S. (1979) The over wintering survival of adults of the Queensland fruit

fly, Dacus tryoni, under natural conditions. Australian Journal of

Zoology, 27, 403-11.

Fletcher, B.S. (1987) The biology of dacine fruit flies. Annual Review of

Entomology, 32, 115-44.

Fletcher, B.S. (1989) Life history startagies of tephritid fruit flies. In Fruit flies.

Their biology, natural enemies and control (ed. by A.S. Robinson & G.

Hooper), Vol. 3B, pp. 195,208, Amsterdam.

Fletcher, B.S. & Kapatos, E. (1981) Dispersal of the olive fly, Dacus oleae, during

the summer period on Corfu. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata,

29, 1-8.

Fletcher, B.S. & Prokopy, R.J. (1991) Host location and oviposition in tephritid fruit

flies. In Reproductive Behaviour of Insects (ed. by J. Bailey & Ridsdill-

Smith). Chapman and Hall, London.

Page 188: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

164

Fontellas, T.M.L. & Zucoloto, F.S. (2004) Selection of oviposition sites by wild

Anastrepha obliqua (Macquart) (Diptera: Tephritidae) based on the

nutritional composition. Neotropical Entomology, 33, 557-562.

Freeman, R. & Carey, J.R. (1990) Interaction of host stimuli in the ovipostional

response of the Mediterranean fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae).

Environmental Entomology, 19, 1075-1080.

Frey, J.E. & Bush, G.L. (1990) Rhagoletis sibling species and host races difference

in host odor recognition. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 57,

123-131.

Friberg, M. & Wiklund, C. (2009) Host plant preference and performance of the

sibling species of butterflies Leptidea sinapis and Leptidea reali: a test

of the trade-off hypothesis for food specialisation. Oecologia, 159, 127-

137.

Friend, A.H. (1957) Artificial infestation of oranges with Queensland fruit fly.

Journal of the Australian Institute of Agricultural Science, 23, 77-80.

Fuselli, S., Susana, R.B., Garcia, de .la .Rosa., & Eguaras, M.J. (2008) Chemical

composition and antimicrobial activity of citrus essences on honeybee

bacterial pathogen Paenibacillus larvae, the causal agent of American

foulbrood. World Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology, 24,

2067-2072.

Giovanni, D. (2010) Citrus Oils: Advanced analytical techniques,composition, and

biological activity. CRC

Girolami, V., Strapazzon, A., Crnjar, R., Angioy, A.M., Pietra, P., Stoffolano, J.G.,

& Prokopy.R.J. (1986) Behaviour and sensory physiology of

Rhagoletis pomonella in relation to oviposition stimulants and

deterrents in fruit. Fruit Flies of Economic Importance, Rotterdam.

Girolami, V., Vianello, A., Strapazzon, A., Ragazzi, E., & Veronese, G. (1981)

Ovipositional deterrents in Dacus oleae. Entomologia Experimentalis et

Applicata, 29, 177-188.

Page 189: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

165

Godfray, H.C.J. (1991) Clutch size. Annual Review of Ecology, 22, 409-429.

Gogi, M.D., Ashfaq, A., Arif , M.J., Sarfraz, R.M., & Nawab, N.N. (2010)

Investigating phenotypic structures and allelo chemical compounds of

the fruits of Momordica charantia L. genotypes as sources of resistance

against Bactroceracucurbitae (Coquillett)(Diptera: Tephritidae). Crop

Protection, 29, 884-890.

Greany, P.D. (1985) Senescence related susceptibility of marsh grapefruit to

laboratory infestation by Anastrepha suspensa (Diptera: Tephritidae).

Florida Entomologist, 68, 144-150.

Greany, P.D., Agee, H.R., Burditt, A.K., & Chambers, D.L. (1977) Field studies on

colour prefernce of the Caribbean fruit fly, Anastrepha suspensa

(Diptera: Tephritidae). Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 21,

63-70.

Greany, P.D., Styer, S.C., Davis, P.L., Shaw, P.E., & Chambers, D.L. (1983)

Biochemical resistance of citrus to fruit flies. Demonstration and

education of resistance to the Caribbean fruit fly, Anastrepha suspensa.

Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 34, 40-50.

Greany, P.D. & Szentesi, A. (1979) Ovipostion behaviour of laboratory reared and

wild Caribbean fruit flies (Anestrepha suspensa), (Diptera;

Tephritidae): II Selected physical influences. Entomological

Experiments and Application, 26, 239-244.

Green, T.A., Prokopy, R.J., Vargas, R.I., Kanehisa, D., & Albrecht, C. (1993) Intra-

tree foraging behaviour of Dacus dorsalis flies in relation to host fruit

quality, quantity and type. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata,

66, 13-20.

Gripenberg, S., Mayhew, P.J., Parnell, M., & Roslin, T. (2010) A meta analysis of

preference–performance relationships in phytophagous insects. Ecology

Letters, 13, 383-393.

Page 190: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

166

Grout, T.G., Stephen, P.R., Daneel, J.H., & Hattingh, V. (2011) Cold treatment of

Ceratitis capitata (Diptera: Tephritidae) in oranges using a larval

endpoint. Journal of Economic Entomology, 104, 1174-1179.

Hafeez, F., Akram, W., & Shalan, E.A. (2011) Mosquito larvicidal activity of citrus

limonoids against Aedes albopictus. Parasitology Research, 109, 221-

229.

Haniotakis, G., Kozyrakis, M., Fitsakis, T., & Antonidakj, A. (1991) An effective

mass trapping method for the control of Dacus oleae (Diptera:

Tephritidae) Journal of Economic Entomology, 84, 564-569.

Hanson, F.E. (1983). The behavioral and neurophysical basis of food-plant selection

by lepidopterous larvae. In Herbivorous Insects: Host Seeking Behavior

and Mechanisms (ed. by S. Amahd), pp. 3-23. Academic, New York.

Hancock, D.L., Hamacek, E.L., Lloyd, A.C., & Elson-Harris, M.M. (2000). The

distribution and host plants of fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in

Australia, Department of Primary Industries, Brisbane.

Harris, E.G. & Lee, S.L. (1986) Seasonal and annual occurrence of Mediterranean

fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in Makaha and Waianae valleys, Oahu,

Hawaii. Environmental Entomology, 15, 507-512.

Heather, N.W., Whitfort, L., McLauchlan, R.L., & Kopittke, R. (1996) Cold

disinfestation of Australian mandarins against Queensland fruit fly

(Diptera: Tephritidae). Postharvest Biology and Technology 8, 307-

315.

Hely, P.C., Pasfield, G., & Gellatley, J.G. (1982) Insect pests of fruit and vegetables

in NSW. Inkata Press, Melbourne.

Henneman, M.L. & Papaj, D.R. (1999) Role of host fruit color in the behavior of the

walnut fly Rhagoletis juglandis. Entomologia Experimentalis et

Applicata, 93, 249-158.

Page 191: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

167

Hennessey, M.K. & Schnell, R.J. (2001) Resistance of immature mango fruits to

Caribbean fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae). Florida Entomologist, 84,

318-319.

Herna´ndez, M.M., Sanz, I., Adelantado, M., Ballach, S., & Primo, E. (1996)

Elelctroantennogram activity from antennae of Ceratitis capitata

(Wied.) to fresh orange airborne volatiles. Journal of Chemical Ecology

22, 1607–1617.

Hill, A.R. & Hooper, G.H.S. (1984) Attractiveness of various coloures to Australian

tephritid fruit flies in the field. Entomologia Experimentalis et

Applicata, 356, 119-128.

Hing, C.T. (1991) Effects of fruit and larval density on development and survival of

Bactrocera spp. (Malaysian B), (Diptera: Tephritidae). Pertanika, 14,

277-280.

Hori, M., Nakamura, H., Fujii, Y., Suzuki, Y., & Matsuda, K. (2011) Chemicals

affecting the feeding preference of the Solanaceae feeding lady beetle

Henosepilachna vigintioctomaculata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae).

Journal of Applied Entomology, 135, 121-131.

Hosni, K., Zahed, N., Chrif, R., Abid, I., Medfei, W., Kallel, M., Brahim, N.B., &

Sebei, H. (2010) Composition of peel essential oils from four selected

Tunisian citrus species: Evidence for the genotypic influence. Food

Chemistry, 123, 1098-1104.

Howard, D.F. & Kenney, P. (1987) Infestation of carambolas by Caribbean fruit flies

(Diptera: Tephritidae): effects of fruit ripeness and cultivar. Journal of

Economic Entomology, 80, 407-410.

Hull, C.D. & Cribb, B.W. (2001a) Olfaction in the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera

tryoni I. Idendification of olfactory receptor nuron types responding to

environmental odours. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 27, 871-887.

Page 192: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

168

Hull, C.D. & Cribb, B.W. (2001b) Olfaction in the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera

tryoni II. Response sepctra and temporal encoding characteristics of the

carbon dioxide receptors. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 27, 889-906.

Hurtado, H.C., Aluja, M., & Liedo, P. (1995) Adult populations of Anastrepha

species (Diptera: Tephritidae) in tropical orchard habitats of Chiapas,

Mexico. Environmental Entomology, 24, 861-869.

Ibrahim, A.G. & Rahman, M.D.A. (1982) Laboratory studies of the effects of

selected tropical fruits on the larvae of the Dacus dorsalis, Hendel.

Pertanika, 5, 90-94.

Imsabai, W., Ketsa, S., & Doornc, W.G.V. (2006) Physiological and biochemical

changes during banana ripening and finger drops. Postharvest Biology

and Technology, 39, 211-216.

Ioannou, C.S., Papadopoulos, N.T., Kouloussis, N.A., Tananaki, C.I., &

Katsoyannos, B. (2012) Essential oils of citrus fruit stimulate

oviposition in the Mediterranean fruit fly Ceratitis capitata (Diptera:

Tephritidae). Physiological Entomology, 37, 330-339.

IPPC (2008) Establishment of areas of low pest prevalence for fruit flies

(Tephritidae). Secretariat of the International Plant Protection

Convention. FAO, Rome.

Israely, N., Yuval, B., Kitron, U., & Nestel, D. (1997) Population fluctuations of

adult Mediterranean fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in a

Mediterranean heterogeneous agricultural region. Environmental

Entomology, 26 , 1263-1269.

Jaenike, J. (1978) On optimal oviposition behaviour by phytophagous insects.

Theoretical population biology, 14, 350-356.

Jang, E.B. & Light, D.M. (1991) Behavioural responses of female oriental fruit flies

to the odor of papayas at three ripeness stages in a laboratory flight

tunnel (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Insect Behaviour, 4, 751-762.

Page 193: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

169

Joachim-Bravo, I.S., Fernandes, O.A., Bortoil, S.A., & Zucoloto, F.S. (2001a)

Oviposition preference hierarchy in Ceratitis capitata (Diptera:

Tephritidae): Influence of female age and experience. Iheringia. Série

Zoologia, 91, 93-100.

Joachim-Bravo, I.S., Fernandes, O.A., Bortoli, S.A., & Zucoloto, F.S. (2001b)

Oviposition behaviour of Ceratitis capitata Wiedemann

(Diptera:Tephritidae): Association between oviposition preference and

larval performance in individual females. Neotropical Entomology, 30,

559-564.

Joel, D.M. (1978) The secretory ducts of mango fruits: a defense system effective

against the mediterranean fruit fly. Israel Journal of Botany 27, 44-45.

Jones, S.R. (1989) Morphology and evolution of the aculei of true fruit flies

(Diptera: Tephritidae) and their relationship to host anatomy. Ph.D.

thesis, Pennsylvania State University Park, University Park.

Jung Nam, K. & Hardie, J. (2012) Host acceptance by aphids: Probing and

larviposition behaviour of the bird cherry-oat aphid, Rhopalosiphum

padi on host and non-host plants. Journal of Insect Physiology 58, 660–

668.

JungJoon, P., KuenWoo, P., KeyIl, S., & KiJong, C. (2011) Evaluation and

comparison of effects of air and tomato leaf temperatures on the

population dynamics of greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes

vaporariorum) in cherry tomato grown in greenhouses Korean Journal

of Horticultural Science & Technology 29, 420-432.

Katsoyannos, B., Couloussis, N.A., & Carey, J.R. (1998) Seasonal and annual

occurrence of Mediterranean fruit flies (Diptera:Tephritidae) on Chios

island Greece: Differences between two neighboring citrus orchards.

Entomological Society of America, 91, 43-51.

Page 194: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

170

Katsoyannos, B.I., Panagiotidou, K., & Kechagia, I. (1986) Effect of colour

properties on the selection of oviposition site by Ceratitis capitata.

Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 42, 187-193.

Krainacker, D.A., Carey, J.R., & Vargas, R.I. (1987) Effect of larval host on life

history traites of the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata.

Oecologia, 73, 583-590.

Lack, D. (1947) The significance of clutch size. Ibis, 89, 309-52.

Ladaniya, M. (2007) Citrus fruit, biology, technology and evaluation Academic press

London.

Lalel, H.J.D., Singh, Z., & Soon, C.T. (2003) Aroma volatile production during fruit

ripening of 'Kensington Pride' mango. Preharvest Biology and

Technology, 27, 323-336.

Lamba, R.J., Sridharb, P., Smithc, M.A.H., & Wisec, I.L. (2003) Oviposition

preference and offspring performance of a wheat midge Sitodiplosis

mosellana (Géhin) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) on defended and less

defended wheat plants. Environmental Entomology, 32, 414-420.

Landolt, P.J. & Reed, R. (1990) Behavior of the papaya fruit fly (Diptera:

Tephritidae): host finding and oviposition. Environmental

Entomology, 19, 1305-1310.

Landolt, P.J., Reed, R., & Heath, R. (1992) Attraction of female papaya fruit fly to

male pheromone and host fruit. Environmental Entomology, 21, 1154-

1159.

Lanoiselet, V., Cother, E.J., & Ash, G.J. (2002) CLIMEX and DYMEX simulations

of the potential occurrence of rice blast disease in south-eastern

Australia. Australasian Plant Pathology, 31, 1-7.

Lalonde, R.G. & Mangel, M. (1994) Seasonal effects on superparasitism by

Rhagoletis completa. Journal of Animal Ecology, 63, 583-588.

Page 195: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

171

Legg, D.E., Schenk, T.C., & Chiang, H.C. (1986) European corn borer (Lepidoptera:

Pyralidae) oviposition preference and survival on sunflower and corn.

Environmental Entomology, 15, 631-634.

Levinson, H., Levinson, A., & Osterried, E. (2003) Orange-derived stimuli

regulating oviposition in the Mediterranean fruit fly. Journal of

Applied Entomology, 127, 269-275.

Levinson, H.Z., Levinson, A.R., & Muller, K. (1990) Influence of some olfactory

and optical properties of fruits on host location by the Mediterranean

fruit fly (Ceratitis capitata Wied). Journal of Applied Entomology,

109, 44-54.

Leyva, J.L., Browning, H.W., & Gilstrap, F.E. (1991) Development of Anastrepha

ludens (Diptera: Tephritidae) in several host fruit. Environmental

Entomology, 20, 1160-1165.

Liquido, N.J., Cunningham, R.T., & Couey, H.M. (1989) Infestation rates of papaya

by fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) in relation to the degree of fruit

ripeness. Journal of Economic Entomology, 82, 213-219.

Liquido, N.J., Cunningham, R.T., & Nakagawa, S. (1990) Host plants of

Mediterranean fruit fly (Diptera:Tephritidae) on the island of Hawaii

(1945-1985 survey). Journal of Economic Entomology, 83, 1863-

1878.

Liu, Y.C. & Chang.C.T. (1995) Attraction of food attractants to melon fly, Dacus

cucurbitae Coquillett. Chin. Journal of Entomology, 15, 69-80.

Liu, Z., Scheirs, J., & Heckel, D.G. (2012) Trade-offs of host use between generalist

and specialist Helicoverpa sibling species: adult oviposition and larval

performance. Oecologia, 168, 459-469.

Lloyd, A. (2007) Area wide management of fruit fly – Central Burnett, Final project

report, Horticulture Australia Ltd, Sydney.

Page 196: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

172

Lloyd, A., Hamacek, E., Kopittke, R.A., Peek, T., Wyatt, P.M., Neale, C.J.,

Eelkema, M., & Gu, H. (2010) Area-wide management of fruit flies

(Diptera: Tephritidae) in the Central Burnett district of Queensland,

Australia. Crop protection, 29, 462-469.

Lloyd, A., Hamacek, E., Smith, D., & Kopittke, R. (2000) Evaluation of protein bait

spraying and inspection on the packing line as quarantine treatments

for fruit fly in citrus, Final report. Horticulture Australia Ltd, .

Sydney.

Malavasi, A. & Prokopy, R.J. (1992) Effect of food depriviation on the foraging

behaviour of Rhagoletis pomonella (Diptera: Tephritidae) female for

food and host hawthorn fruit. Journal of Entomological Science, 27,

185-193.

Mangan, R.L., Thomas, D.B., Moreno, A.T., & Robacker, D. (2011) Grapefruit as a

host for the West Indian fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of

Economic Entomology, 104, 54-62.

Mararuai, A.N. (2010) Market access of Papua New Guinea bananas (Musa Spp.)

with particular respect to Banana Fly (Bactrocera musae (Tryon))

(Diptera: Tephritidae) (2010). PhD thesis, Queensland University of

Technology, Brisbane.

Mau, R.F.L., Jang, E.B., & Vargas, R.I. (2007) The Hawaii area-wide fruit fly pest

management programme: influence of partnerships and a good

education programme. Area-Wide Control of Insect Pests.

Mavrikakis, P.G., Economopoulos, A.P., & Carey, J.R. (2000) Countinuous winter

reproduction and growth of the Mediterranean fruit fly (Diptera:

Tephritidae) in Heraklion, Crete, Southern Greece. Environmental

Entomology, 29, 1180-1187.

May, A.W.S. (1963) An investigation of fruit flies (Trypetidae: Diptera) in

Queensland. Queensland Journal of Agricultural Science, 20, 1- 82.

Page 197: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

173

May, M.L. & Ahmad, S. (1983) Host location in the Colorado potato beetle:

searching mechanisms in relation to oligophagy. In Herbivorous

Insects: Host seeking behavior and mechanisms (ed. by S.Amahd), pp.

173–99. Academic, New York.

Mayer, D.F., Long, L.E., Smithc, T.J., Olsend, J., Riedle, H., Heathf, R.R., Leskeyg,

T.C., & Prokopy , R.J. (2000) Attraction of adult Rhagoletis

indifferens (Diptera: Tephritidae) to unbaited and odor baited red

spheres and yellow rectangles. Journal of Economic Entomology, 93,

347-351.

Mayhew, P.J. (1997) Adaptive patterns of host-plant selection by phytophagous

insects. Oikos, 79, 417-428.

Maywald, G.F., R.W., S., & Zaluki, M.P. (1999) DYMEX Professional: Modelling

Natural Systems. CSIRO, Australia,.

McDonald, P.T. & McInnis, D.O. (1985) Ceratitis capitata : Effect of host fruit size

on the number of eggs per clutch. Entomologia Experimentalis et

applicata, 37, 207-211.

Medlicott, A.P. & Thompson, A.K. (1985) Analysis of sugars and organic acids in

ripening mango fruits (Mangifera indica L. var Keitt) by high

performance liquid chromatography. Journal of the Science of Food

and Agriculture, 36, 561-566.

Messina, F.J. (1989) Host-plant variables influencing the spatial distribution of a

frugivorous fly, Rhagoletis indifferens. Entomologia Experimentalis

et Applicata, 50, 287-294.

Messina, F.J., Alston, D.G., & Jones, V.P. (1991) Oviposition by the Western cherry

fruit fly (Diptera: Tephrititdae) in relation to host development.

Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society, 64, 197-208.

Messina, F.J. & Jones, P.J. (1990) Relationship between fruit phenology and

infestation by the apple maggot (Diptera:Tephritidae) in Utah. Annals

of the Entomological Society of America, 83, 742-752.

Page 198: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

174

Miller, J. & Strickler, K.L. (1984) Finding and accepting host plants. In Chemical

Ecology in Insects (ed. by Bells.W.J. & R. Carde). Chapman and Hall,

London.

Minkenberg, O.P.J.M., Tatar, M., & Rosenheim, J.A. (1992) Egg load as a major

source of variability in insect foraging and oviposition behaviour.

Oikos, 65, 134-142.

Muthuthantri, W.S.N. (2008) Population phenology of the tropical fruit fly,

Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae), in Queensland,

Australia. Masters thesis, Queensland University of Technology,

Brisbane.

Muthuthantri, W.S.N., Maelzer, D.A., Zalucki, M.P., & Clarke, A.R. (2010) The

seasonal phenology of Bactrocera tryoni (Froggatt) (Diptera:

Tephritidae) in Queensland. Australian Journal of Entomology, 49,

221-233.

Nahrung, H.F., Schutze, M.K., Clarke, A.R., Duffy, M.P., Dunlop, E.A., & Lawson,

S.A. (2008) Thermal requirements, field mortality and population

phenology modelling of Paropsis atomaria Olivier, an emergent pest

in subtropical hardwood plantations. Forest Ecology and

Management, 255, 3515–3523.

Nakagawa, S., Prokopy, R.J., Wong, T.T.Y., Ziegler, J.R., Mitchell, W.C., Urago,

T., & Harris, E.G. (1978) Visual orientation of Ceratistis capitata

flies to fruit models. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 24,

193-198.

Navarro-Llopis, V., Alfaro, F., Domínguez, J., Sanchis, J., & Primo, J. (2008)

Evaluation of traps and lures for mass trapping of Mediterranean fruit

fly in citrus groves. Journal of Economic Entomology, 101, 126-131.

Neilson, W.T.A. (1971) Dispersal studies of a natural population of apple maggot

adults. Journal of Economic Entomology, 64, 648-653.

Page 199: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

175

Nestel, D. & Nemny-Lavy, E. (2008) Nutrient balance in medfly, Ceratitis capitata,

larval diets affects the ability of the developing insect to incorporate

lipid and protein reserves. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata,

126, 53-60.

Nufio, C.R., Papaj, D.R., & Alonso-Pimentel, I. (2000) Host utilization by the

Walnut fly, Rhagoletis juglandis (Diptera: Tephritidae).

Entomological Society of America, 93, 994-1001.

Nufio, C.S.R. & Papaj, D.R. (2004) Superparasitism of larval hosts by the Walnut

fly, Rhagoletis juglandis, and its implications for female and offspring

performance. Oecologia 141, 460-467.

Nylin, S. (1996) Oviposition plant performance and offspring performance in the

comma butterfly: Correlations and conflicts. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 80, 141.

Nylin, S. & Janz, N. (1996) Host plant preferences in the comma butterfly

(Polygonia c-album): Do parents and offspring. Ecoscience, 3, 285-

289.

Nyman, T., Paajanen, R., Hwiska, S., & Riitta, R.J. (2011) Preference-performance

relationship in the gall midge Rabdophaga rosaria: insights from a

common garden experiment with nine willow clones. Ecological

Entomology, 36, 200-211.

Oi, D.H. & Mau, R.F.L., (1969) Relationship of fruit ripeness to infestation in

'Sharwil' avocados by the Mediterranean fruit fly and the Oriental fruit

fly (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Economic Entomology, 82, 556-

560.

Owens, E.D. & Prokopy, R.J. (1986) Relationship between reflectance spectra of

host plant surfaces and visual detection of host fruit by Rhagoletis

pomonella flies. Physiological Entomology, 11, 297-307.

Page 200: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

176

Padhi, G. & Chatterji, S.M. (1986) Influence of chlorophyll content of rice varieties

on the ovipositional preference of Scirpophage incertulas. Journal of

Environmental Resources, 10, 114-116.

Papachristos, D.P., Kimbaris, A.C., Papadopoulos, N.T., & Polissiou, M.G. (2009)

Toxicity of citrus essential oils against Ceratitis capitata (Diptera:

Tephritidae) larvae. Annals of Applied Biology, 155, 381-389.

Papachristos, D.P. & Papadopoulos, N.T. (2009) Are citrus species favorable hosts

for the Mediterranean fruit fly? A demographic perspective.

Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 132, 1-12.

Papachristos, D.P., Papadopoulos, N.T., & Nanos, G.D. (2008) Survival and

development of immature stages of the Mediterranean fruit fly

(Diptera: Tephritidae) in citrus fruit. Journal of Economic

Entomology, 101, 866-872.

Papadopoulos, N.T., Carey, J.R., Katsoyannos, B.I., & Kouloussis, N.A. (1996)

Overwintering of the Mediterranean fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) in

northern Greece. Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 89,

526-534.

Papadopoulos, N.T., Katsoyannos, B.I., Carey, J.R., & Kouloussis, N.A. (2001)

Seasonal and annual occurrence of the Mediterranean fruit fly

(Diptera: Tephritidae) in northern Greece. Annals of the

Entomological Society of America, 94, 41-50.

Papaj, D.R. & Alonso-Pimentel (1997) Why walnut flies superparasitize: Time

saving as a posisble explanation Oecologia, 109, 166-174.

Papaj, D.R., Averill, A.L., Prokopy, R.J., & Wong, T.T.Y. (1992) Host marking

pheromone and use of previously established oviposition sites by the

Mediterranean fruit fly (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Insect

Behaviour, 5, 583-598.

Page 201: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

177

Papaj, D.R., Hendrichs, J., & Katsoyannos, B. (1989) Use of fruit wounds in

oviposition by the Mediterranean fruit fly. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 53, 203-209.

Papaj, D.R. & Messing, R.H. (1998) Asymmetries in dynamical state as a possible

explanation for resident advantage in contests. Behavior, 135, 1013-

1030.

Papaj, D.R., Opp, S.B., Prokopy, R.J., & Wong, T.T.W. (1989) Cross - induction of

fruit acceptance by the Medfly Ceratitis capitata: The role of fruit

size and chemistry. Journal of Insect Behavior, 2, 241-254.

Papaj, D.R. & Messing, R.H. (1996) Functional shifts in the use of parasitized hosts

by a tephritid fly: the role of host quality. Behavioral Ecology 7, 135-

242.

Parry, H.R., Aurambout, J.P., & Kriticos, D.J. (2011) Having your cake and eating

it: A modelling framework to combine process-based population

dynamics and dispersal simulation. In 19th International Congress on

Modelling and Simulation (ed. by F. Chan, D. Marinova & R.S.

Anderssen), pp. 2535-2541. Maralte Publishers, Perth,Australia.

Pena, J.E., Baranowski, R.M., & Lits, R.E. (1986) Oviposition of the papaya fruit fly

Toxotrypana curvicauda Gerstaecker as affected by fruit maturity.

Florida Entomologist, 69, 344-348.

Pike, E.A., Corcoran, R.J., Peterson, P.M., & Okello-okanya, E. (2001) Fruit fly

culturing procedures (ed. by Q.h. institution), Cairns.

Pontes, W.J., LIMA, R., Chuna, E.G., Andrade, P.M., Lobo, A.P., & Barros, R.

(2010) Physical and chemical cues affect oviposition by

Neoleucinodes elegantalis. Physiological Entomology, 35, 134-139.

Powell, G., Maniar, S.P., Pickett, J.A., & Hardie, J. (1999) Aphid responses to non-

host epicuticular lipids. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 91,

115–123.

Page 202: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

178

Powell, G., Tosh, C.R., & Hardie, J. (2006) Host plant selection by aphids:

behavioural,evolutionary, and applied perspectives. Annual Review of

Entomology, 51, 309–330.

Pritchard, G. (1969) The ecology of a natural population of Queensland fruit fly,

Dacus tryoni. ii. The distribution of eggs and its relation to behavior.

Australian Journal of Zoology, 17, 293-311.

Prokopy, R.J. (1968) Visual responses of apple maggot flies, Rhagoletis pomonella:

orchard studies. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 11, 403-

422.

Prokopy, R.J. (1969) Visual responses of European cherry fruit flies, Rhagoletis

cerasi L (Diptera: Tephritidae). Polskkie Pisno Entomology, 39, 539-

566.

Prokopy, R.J. (1972) Evidance for a marking pheromone dettering repeated

ovipositioning apple maggot flies. Environmental Entomology, 1,

326-332.

Prokopy, R.J., Averill, A.L., Cooley, S.S., Sylvia, S., & Roitberg, C.A. (1982)

Associative learning in egg laying site selection by apple maggot flies.

Science, 218, 76-77.

Prokopy, R.J. & Boller, E.F. (1971) Stimuli eleciting oviposition of European cherry

fruit flies, Rhagoletis cerasi (Diptera: Tephritidae), into inanimate

objects. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 14, 1-14.

Prokopy, R.J. & Bush, G.L. (1973) Ovipositional responses to different sizes of

artificial fruit by flies of Rhagoletis pomonella species group. Annals

of the Entomological Society of America, 66, 927-929.

Prokopy, R.J., Cooley, S.S., Luna, I., & Duan, J.J. (1995) Combined influence of

protein hunger and egg load on the resource foraging behaviour of

Rhagoletis pomonella flies (Diptera: Tephritidae). European Journal

of Entomology, 92, 655-666.

Page 203: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

179

Prokopy, R.J. & Diehl, S.R. (1988) Behavioral evidence for races in Rhagoletis

pomonella flies. Oecologia, 76, 138-147.

Prokopy, R.J. & Fletcher, B.S. (1987) The role of adult learning in the acceptance of

host fruit for egglaying by the Queensland fruit fly, Dacus tryoni.

Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 45, 259-263.

Prokopy, R.J., Green, T.A., & Vargas, R.I. (1990) Dacus dorsalis flies can learn to

find and accept host fruit. Journal of Insect Behavior, 3, 663-672.

Prokopy, R.J., McDonald, P.T., & Wong, T.T.Y. (1984) Inter - population variation

among Ceratitis capitata flies in host acceptance pattern. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 35, 65-69.

Prokopy, R.J., Miller, J., Duan, J., & Vargas, R.I. (2000) Local enhancement of

arrivals of Ceratitis capitata females on fruit mimics. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 97, 211-217.

Prokopy, R.J. & Owens, E.D. (1978) Visual generalist vs visual specialist

phytophagous insects: host selection behavior and application to

management. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 24, 409-420.

Prokopy, R.J. & Papaj, D.R. (1989) Can ovipositing Rhagoletis pomonella females

(Diptera: Tephritidae) learn to discriminate among different ripeness

stages of the same host biotypes? Florida Entomologist, 72, 489-494.

Prokopy, R.J. & Reynolds, A.H. (1998) Ovipositional enhancement through socially

facilitated behavior in Rhagoletis pomonella flies. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 86, 281-286.

Prokopy, R.J. & Roitberg, B.D. (1984) Foraging behaviour of true fruit flies.

American Scientist, 72, 41-49.

Prokopy, R.J. & Roitberg, B.D. (1994) Effects of egg load on finding and acceptance

of host fruit in Ceratitis capitata flies. Physiological Entomology, 19,

124-132.

Page 204: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

180

Prokopy, R.J., Romig, M.C., & Drew, R.A.I. (1999) Facilitation in ovipositional

behavior of Bactrocera tryoni flies. Journal of Insect Behavior, 12,

815-832.

Prokopy, R.J. & Vargas, R.I. (1996) Attraction of Ceratitis capitata (Diptera:

Tephritidae) flies to odor of coffee fruit. Journal of Chemical

Ecology, 22, 807-821.

Raga, A., Prestes, D.A.O., Filho, M.F.S., Sato, M.E., Siloto, R.C., Guimaraes, J.A.,

& Zucchi, R.A. (2004) Fruit Fly (Diptera: Tephritoidea) infestation in

citrus in the State of São Paulo, Brazil. Neotropical Entomology, 33,

85-89.

Raghu, S., Clarke, A.R., Drew, R.A.I., & Hulsman, K. (2000) Impact of habitat

modification on the distribution and abundance of fruit flies (Diptera:

Tephritidae) in south-east Queensland. Population Ecology, 42, 153-

160.

Raghu, S., Drew, R.A.I., & Clarke, A.R. (2004) Influence of host plant structure and

microclimate on the abundance and behavior of a tephritid fly.

Journal of Insect Behavior, 17, 179-190.

Rattanapun, W., Amornsak, W., & Clarke, A.R. (2009) Bactrocera dorsalis

preference for and performance on two mango varieties at three stages

of ripeness. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 131, 243-253.

Rattanapun, W., Amornsak, W., & Clarke, A.R. (2010) Is a mango just a mango?

Testing within-fruit oviposition site choice and larval performance of

a highly polyphagous fruit fly. Arthropod-Plant Interactions 4, 35-44.

Reissig, W.H. (1979) Survival of apple maggot larvae, Rhagoletis pomonella

(Diptera: Tephritidae), in picked and unpicked apples. Canadian

Entomologist, 111, 181-187.

Renwick, J.A.A. (1989) Chemical ecology of oviposition in phytophagous insects.

Experientia, 45, 223-228.

Page 205: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

181

Renwick, J.A.A. (2001) Variable diets and changing taste in plant–insect

relationships. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 27, 1063-1076.

Robacker, D.C. & Fraser, I. (2002a) Attraction of Mexican fruit flies (Diptera:

Tephritidae) to grapefruit : Enhancement by mechanical wounding of

and experience with grapefruit. Journal of Insect Behaviour, 15, 399-

413.

Robacker, D.C. & Fraser, I. (2002b) Do Mexican fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae)

prefer grapefruit to yellow chapote, a native host? Florida

Entomologist, 85, 481-487.

Robinson, A.S. & Hooper, A.S., eds. (1989) Fruit flies:their biology, natural enemies

and control. Vol. A & B. Elsevier Science Publication, Amsterdam.

Roitberg, B.D., Robertson, I.C., & Tyerman,J.G.A. (1999) Vive la varience: a

functional oviposition theory for insect herbivores. Entomologia

Experimentalis et Applicata, 91, 187-194.

Rosenheim, J.A. & Rosen, D. (1991) Foraging and oviposition decision in the

parasitoid Aphytis lingnanensis: Distinguishing the influence of egg

load and experience. Journal of Animal Ecology, 60, 873-893.

Rothschild, M., Alborn, H., Stenhagen, G., & Schoonhoven, L.M. (1988) A

strophanthidine glycoside in the Siberian wallflower: A contact

deterrent for the large white butterfly. Phytochemistry, 27, 101-108.

Rull, J. & Prokopy, R.J. (2004) Host finding and ovipositional boring responses of

apple maggot (Diptera: Tephritidae) to different apple genotypes.

Environmental Entomology, 33, 1695-1702.

Salvatore, A., Borkosky, S., Willink, E., & Bardon, A. (2004) Toxic effects of lemon

peel constituents on Ceratitis capitata. Journal of Chemical Ecology,

30, 323-333.

Scriber, M. (1984). Host plant suitability. In Chemical Ecology of Insects (ed. by

J.B. William & T.C. Ring). Chapman & Hall.

Page 206: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

182

Senter, S.D. & Callahan, A. (1990) Variability in the quantities of condensed tannins

and other major phenols in peach fruit during maturation. Journal of

Food Science, 55, 1585-1587.

Seo, S.T., Farias, G.J., & Harris, E.J. (1982) Oriental fruit fly: Ripening of fruit and

its effect on index of infestation of Hawaiian papaya. Journal of

Economic Entomology 75, 173-178.

Seo, S.T. & Tang, C.S. (1982) Hawaiian fruit flies (Diptera: Tephritidae): toxicity of

benzyl isothiocyanate against eggs or first instars of three species.

Journal of Economic Entomology, 75, 1132-1135.

Seo, S.T., Tang, C.S., Sanidad, S., & Takenaba, T. (1983) Hawaiian fruit flies.

(Diptera: Tephritidae): variation of index infestation with benzyl

isothiocyanate concetration and color of maturing papaya. Journal of

Economic Entomology, 76, 535-538.

Shaw, P.E. (1979) Review of quantitative analyses of citrus essential oils. Journal of

Agricultural Food Chemistry, 27, 246-257.

Shelly, T.E. (1999) Defense of oviposition sites by female oriental fruit flies

(Diptera: Tephritidae). Florida Entomologist, 82, 339-346.

Shikano, I., Akhtar, Y., & Isman, M.B. (2010) Relationship between adult and larval

host plant selection and larval performance in the generalist moth,

Trichoplusia ni. Arthropod-Plant Interactions, 4, 197-205.

Shukla, R.P. & Prasad, V.G. (1985) Population fluctuations of the Oriental fruit fly,

Dacus dorsalis Hendel in relation to hosts and abiotic factors.

Tropical Pest Management, 31, 273-275.

Singer, C.M (1986). The definition and measurement of oviposition preference in

plant-feeding insects. In Mechanistic interactions between insects and

plants (ed. by J. Miller & T.A. Miller), pp. 65-94. Springer, New

York.

Page 207: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

183

Skinner, S.W. (1985) Clutch size as an optimal foraging problem for insects.

Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology, 17, 231-238.

Smith, D., Beattie, G.A.C., & Broadley, R. (1997) Citrus pests and their natural

enemies: integrated pest management in Australia, Queensland

Department of Primary Industries Information Series QI97030,

Brisbane.

Soo Hoo, C.F. & Fraenkel, G. (1996) The selection of food plants in a polyphagous

insect, Prodenia eridania (Cramer). Journal of Insect Physiology, 12,

693-709.

Spitler, G.H., Armstrong, J.W., & Couey, H.M. (1984) Mediterranean fruit fly

(Diptera: Tephritidae) host status of commercial lemon. Journal of

Economic Entomology, 77, 1441-1444.

Stadler, E. (1986) Oviposition and feeding stimuli in leaf surface waxes. In Insect

and the plant surface (ed. by B. Juniper & R. Southwood), pp. 105 -

121, London.

Stange, G. (1999) Carbon Dioxide is a close-range oviposition attractant in the

Queensland fruit fly Bactrocera tryoni. Naturwissenschaften, 86, 190-

192.

Staub, C.G., Lima, F.D., & Majer, J.D. (2008) Determination of host status of citrus

fruits aginst the Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata

(Wiedemann) (Diptera: Tephritidae). Australian Journal of

Entomology, 47, 184-87.

Szentesi, A., Greany, P.D., & Chambers, D.L. (1979) Oviposition behaviour of

laboratory-reared and wild Caribbean fruit flies (Anastrepha

suspensa; Diptera: Tephritidae):I.Selected chemical influences.

Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 26, 227-238.

Tan, K.H. & Serit, M. (1994) Adult population dynamics of Bactrocera dorsalis

(Diptera: Tephritidae) in relation to host phenology and weather in

Page 208: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

184

two villages of Penang Island, Malaysia. Environmental Entomology,

23, 267-275.

Tanaka, N. (1965) Artificial egging receptacles for three species of tephritid flies.

Journal of Economic Entomology, 58, 177-178.

Tania, M.L., Brandalha, F., & Zucoloto, F.S. (2004) Selection of oviposition sites by

wild Anastrepha obliqua (Macqurt) (Diptera: Tephritidae) based on

the nutritional composition. Neotropical Entomology, 33, 557-562.

Thompson, J.N. (1988) Evolutionary ecology of the relationship between oviposition

preference and performance of offspring in phytophagous insects.

Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 47, 3-14.

Thorsteinson, A.J. (1960) Host selection in phytophagous insects. Annual Review of

Entomology, 5, 193 - 218.

Tora Vueti, E., Ralulu, L., Walker, G.P., Allwood, A.J., Leweniqila, L., &

Balawakula, A. (1997). Host availability - Its impact on seasonal

abundance of fruit flies. In Management of Fruit flies in the Pacific: A

regional symposium. ACIAR Proceedings No. 76 (ed. by A.J.

Allwood & R.A.I. Drew), pp. 105-110. Australian Centre for

International Agricultural Research, Canberra.

Tracewski, K.T., Brunner, J.F., Hoyt, S.C., & Dewey,S.R (1988) Occurance of

Rhagoletis pomonella (Walsh) in hawthorns, Crataegus, of the Pacific

Northwest. Melanderia 45, 19-25.

Tsiropoulos, G.J. & Hagen, K.S. (1979) Ovipositional response of the walnut husk

fly, Rhagoletis completa, to artificial substrates. Zeitschrift für

Angewandte Entomologie, 88, 547-550.

Vargas, R., Stark, J.D., & Nishida, T. (1990) Population dynamics, habitat

preference, and seasonal distribution patterns of Oriental fruit fly and

Melon fly (Diptera: Tephritidae) in an agricultural area.

Environmental Entomology, 19, 1820-1828.

Page 209: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

185

Vargas, R.I., Walsh, W.A., Jang, E.B., Armstrong, J.W., & Kanehisa, D.T. (1996)

Survival and development of immature stages of four Hawaiian fruit

flies (Diptera: Tephritidae) reared at five constant temperatures.

Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 89, 64-69.

Vargas, R.I., Walsh, W.A., & Nishida, T. (1995) Colonization of newly planted

coffee fields: dominance of Mediterranean fruit fly over Oriental fruit

fly (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Economic Entomology, 88, 620-

627.

Veitch, R. & Simmonds, J.H. (1929) Pests and diseases of Queensland fruits and

vegetables,.[Queensland] Government Printer, Brisbane.

Videla, M., Valladares, G.R., & Salvo, A. (2012) Choosing between good and better:

optimal oviposition drives host plant selection when parents and

offspring agree on best resources. Oecologia, 169, 743-751.

Viuda-Martos, M., Ruiz-Navajas, Y., Fernandes-Lopez, J., & Perez-Alvarez, J.

(2008) Antifungal activity of lemon (Citrus lemon L.), mandarin

(Citrus reticulata L.), grapefruit (Citrus paradisi L.) and orange

(Citrus sinensis L.) essential oils. Food Control, 19, 1130–1138.

Vreysen, M.J., Robinson, A.S., & Hendrichs, J. (2007) Area-wide Control of Insect

Pests: from Research to Field Implementation. Springer.

Wennström, A., Hjulström, L.N., Hjältén, J., & Julkunen-Tiitto, R. (2010) Mother

really knows best: host choice of adult phytophagous insect females

reflects a within-host variation in suitability as larval food.

Chemoecology, 20, 35-42.

Wharton, R.A. & Gilstrap, F.E. (1983) Key to the status of opiine braconid

(Hymenoptera) parasitoids used in biological control of Ceratitis

capitata and Dacus s.l. (Diptera: Tephritidae). Annals of

Entomological Scociety of America, 76, 42-721.

Page 210: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

186

Wiklund, C. (1974) Oviposition preferance in Papilio machaon in relation to the

host plant of the larvae. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 17,

189-198.

Wiklund, C. (1975) The evalutionary relationship between adult oviposition

preference and larval host plant range in Papilio machaon. Oecologia,

18, 185-197.

Wills, R.B.H., Lee, T.H., Graham, D., & Mcglasson, W.B. (1981) Post harvest: An

introduction to the physiology and handling of fruits and vegetables.

AVI publications, Connecticut.

Yashoda, H.M., Prabha, T.N., & Tharanathan, R.N. (2007) Mango ripening : role of

carbohydrases in tissue softening. Food Chemistry, 102, 691-698.

Yonow, T. & Sutherst, R.W. (1998) The geographical distribution of the Queensland

fruit fly, Bactrocera (Dacus) tryoni, in relation to climate. Australian

Journal of Agricultural Research, 49, 935-953.

Yonow, T., Zalucki, M.P., Sutherst, R.W., Dominiak, B.C., Maywald, G.F., Maelzer,

D.A., & Kriticos, D.J. (2004) Modelling the population dynamics of

the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera (Dacus) tryoni: a cohort-based

approach incorporating the effects of weather. Ecological Modelling,

173, 9-30.

Yuval, B. & Hendrichs, J. (2000) Behaviour of flies in the genus Ceratitis. Fruit flies

(Tephritidae): Physiology and evolution of behaviour CRC press,

Florida.

Zalucki, M.P., Malcolm, S.B., Paine, T.D., Hanlon, C.C., Brower, L.P., & Clarke,

A.R. (2001) It’s the first bites that count: Survival of first instar

monarchs on milkweeds. Austral Ecology, 26, 547-555.

Zucoloto, F.S. (1987) Feeding habits of Ceratitis capitata (Diptera: Tephritidae)

:Can larvae recognize a nutritionally effective diet? Journal of Insect

Physiology, 33, 349-353.

Page 211: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

187

Zucoloto, F.S. (1991) Effects of flavour and nutritional value on diet selection by

Ceratitis capitata larvae (Diptera: Tephritidae). Journal of Insect

Physiology, 37, 21-25.

Zucoloto, F.S. (1993) Acceptability of different Brazilian fruits to Ceratitis capitata

(Diptera, Tephritidae) and fly performance on each species. Brazilian

Journal of Medical and Illogical Research, 26, 291-298.

Page 212: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

188

APPENDICES

Appendix 1: The reproductive female cohort selected for one way ANOVA among

different Lhq in the sensitivity analysis

Day Since start Reproductive female

Lhq Lhq Lhq Lhq Lhq Lhq Lhq

0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 0.3 0.35 0.4

30 3861.44 2345.71 1395.24 816.99 476.87 284.31 179.97 31 4823.76 2922.19 1729.78 1004.34 577.64 336.06 205.17 32 5060.83 3064.21 1812.19 1050.49 602.46 348.81 211.37 33 5119.37 3099.28 1832.54 1061.89 608.59 351.96 212.9 34 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 35 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 36 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 37 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 38 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 39 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 40 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 41 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 42 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 43 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 44 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 45 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 46 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 47 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 48 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 49 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 50 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 51 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 52 5133.73 3107.88 1837.53 1064.68 610.09 352.73 213.28 53 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213 54 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213 55 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213 56 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213 57 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213 58 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213 59 5126.89 3103.74 1835.09 1063.26 609.28 352.26 213

Page 213: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

189

Appendix2: Preliminary trial: Host quality of non-citrus fruits

Different non-commercial hosts abundant in Mundubbera were tested for host

susceptibility of B. tryoni in the laboratory. The types of hosts were selected based

on the fruit collection records from DPI area wide management program. Thus,

mulberry, cherry guava, mango and loquat were chosen to see the B. tryoni host

susceptibility. These fruits except mango were obtained from trees in the

surrounding area in Brisbane during spring months. Mango was purchased from

organic market in Brisbane. Cherry guava, loquat and mulberry were weighed and

sorted as small, medium and large. These fruits were artificially inoculated with B.

tryoni eggs obtained from the B. tryoni fly colony maintained in DEEDI laboratory

Indooroopilly, Brisbane. Number of eggs per fruit was decided based on the larval

diet ratio of thee eggs/gram of food (Pike et al., 2001). Small incision was made

using clean scalp and inserted required number of eggs into the cut and placed on a

dripping tray and which placed on wet vermiculate tray. These fruits were then kept

in CT room (25°C, 76% RH) until pupae emerged. After two weeks, pupation was

checked for more two weeks until all pupae were emerged. Mean pupal emergence

of different hosts were compared using one way ANOVA and mean separation done

using LSD post hoc test.

Fruit type

Cherry guava Loquat Mango Mulberry

Pupa

e em

erge

nce

perc

enta

ge

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

ab

ba

ab

Number of B. tryoni pupae emerged from artificially inoculated fruits available in

Mundubbera

Page 214: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

190

Results showed that there was significant difference in number of pupae emerged

among different hosts (F102, 3 = 30.08, p = 0). There were no significant difference in

pupae emergence among cherry guava, mulberry and loquat. Only mango and loquat

pupal emergence was significantly different to each other (p = 0.29).

Page 215: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

191

Appendix 3 : Location specific fruit phenology data created for five scenarios (CD)

Scenario 1

Date trees/land Fruits/tree Land Total fruits available 1/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 2/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 3/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 4/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 5/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 6/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 7/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 8/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 9/01/1996 158 5 10 7900

10/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 11/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 12/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 13/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 14/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 15/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 16/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 17/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 18/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 19/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 20/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 21/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 22/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 23/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 24/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 25/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 26/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 27/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 28/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 29/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 30/01/1996 158 5 10 7900 31/01/1996 158 5 10 7900

1/02/1996 158 5 10 7900 2/02/1996 158 5 10 7900 3/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 4/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 5/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 6/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 7/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 8/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 9/02/1996 158 10 10 15800

10/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 11/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 12/02/1996 158 10 10 15800

Page 216: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

192

13/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 14/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 15/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 16/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 17/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 18/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 19/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 20/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 21/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 22/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 23/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 24/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 25/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 26/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 27/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 28/02/1996 158 10 10 15800 29/02/1996 158 10 10 15800

1/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 2/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 3/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 4/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 5/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 6/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 7/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 8/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 9/03/1996 158 10 10 15800

10/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 11/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 12/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 13/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 14/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 15/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 16/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 17/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 18/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 19/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 20/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 21/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 22/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 23/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 24/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 25/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 26/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 27/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 28/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 29/03/1996 158 10 10 15800

Page 217: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

193

30/03/1996 158 10 10 15800 31/03/1996 158 10 10 15800

1/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 2/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 3/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 4/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 5/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 6/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 7/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 8/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 9/04/1996 158 70 10 110600

10/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 11/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 12/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 13/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 14/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 15/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 16/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 17/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 18/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 19/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 20/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 21/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 22/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 23/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 24/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 25/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 26/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 27/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 28/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 29/04/1996 158 70 10 110600 30/04/1996 158 70 10 110600

1/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 2/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 3/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 4/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 5/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 6/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 7/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 8/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 9/05/1996 158 70 10 110600

10/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 11/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 12/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 13/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 14/05/1996 158 70 10 110600

Page 218: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

194

15/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 16/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 17/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 18/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 19/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 20/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 21/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 22/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 23/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 24/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 25/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 26/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 27/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 28/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 29/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 30/05/1996 158 70 10 110600 31/05/1996 158 70 10 110600

1/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 2/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 3/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 4/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 5/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 6/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 7/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 8/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 9/06/1996 158 70 10 110600

10/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 11/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 12/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 13/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 14/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 15/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 16/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 17/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 18/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 19/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 20/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 21/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 22/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 23/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 24/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 25/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 26/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 27/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 28/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 29/06/1996 158 70 10 110600

Page 219: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

195

30/06/1996 158 70 10 110600 1/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 2/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 3/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 4/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 5/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 6/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 7/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 8/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 9/07/1996 158 70 10 110600

10/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 11/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 12/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 13/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 14/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 15/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 16/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 17/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 18/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 19/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 20/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 21/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 22/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 23/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 24/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 25/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 26/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 27/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 28/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 29/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 30/07/1996 158 70 10 110600 31/07/1996 158 70 10 110600

1/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 2/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 3/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 4/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 5/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 6/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 7/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 8/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 9/08/1996 158 70 10 110600

10/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 11/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 12/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 13/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 14/08/1996 158 70 10 110600

Page 220: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

196

15/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 16/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 17/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 18/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 19/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 20/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 21/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 22/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 23/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 24/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 25/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 26/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 27/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 28/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 29/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 30/08/1996 158 70 10 110600 31/08/1996 158 70 10 110600

1/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 2/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 3/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 4/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 5/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 6/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 7/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 8/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 9/09/1996 158 100 10 158000

10/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 11/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 12/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 13/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 14/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 15/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 16/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 17/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 18/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 19/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 20/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 21/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 22/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 23/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 24/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 25/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 26/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 27/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 28/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 29/09/1996 158 100 10 158000

Page 221: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

197

30/09/1996 158 100 10 158000 1/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 2/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 3/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 4/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 5/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 6/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 7/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 8/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 9/10/1996 158 10 10 15800

10/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 11/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 12/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 13/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 14/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 15/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 16/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 17/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 18/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 19/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 20/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 21/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 22/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 23/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 24/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 25/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 26/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 27/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 28/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 29/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 30/10/1996 158 10 10 15800 31/10/1996 158 10 10 15800

1/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 2/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 3/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 4/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 5/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 6/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 7/11/1996 158 10 10 15800 8/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 9/11/1996 158 5 10 7900

10/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 11/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 12/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 13/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 14/11/1996 158 5 10 7900

Page 222: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

198

15/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 16/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 17/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 18/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 19/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 20/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 21/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 22/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 23/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 24/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 25/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 26/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 27/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 28/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 29/11/1996 158 5 10 7900 30/11/1996 158 5 10 7900

1/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 2/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 3/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 4/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 5/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 6/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 7/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 8/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 9/12/1996 158 5 10 7900

10/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 11/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 12/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 13/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 14/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 15/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 16/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 17/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 18/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 19/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 20/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 21/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 22/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 23/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 24/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 25/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 26/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 27/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 28/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 29/12/1996 158 5 10 7900 30/12/1996 158 5 10 7900

Page 223: Bactrocera tryoni (Frogatt) (Diptera: Tephritidae): …eprints.qut.edu.au/62855/2/Weerawickramage_Muthuthantri...Citrus host utilisation by the Queensland fruit fly, Bactrocera tryoni

199

31/12/1996 158 5 10 7900