Feb.
5, 2013 — Everyone needs to eat. But it's a dog-eat-dog world, and with
the exception of the top predators, everyone also gets eaten. To cope with this
vicious reality, a tiny insect that eats plants has learned to employ the
plant's hairs for physical protection from its beetle predator.
The
pest is called the cycad aulacaspis scale, and its invasion into numerous
countries in recent years has caused immeasurable loss of biodiversity. Cycads
belong to an ancient lineage of plants that date to the dinosaur era, and the
pest requires a cycad plant for food. The insect's recent invasion to the
island of Guam has endangered the island's endemic cycad species. Local
biologists introduced a voracious beetle predator to the island to eat the
scale insects, but the plant damage by the pest has persisted.
"We
began looking into the reasons that the beetle was failing to control the pest,
and discovered that the pest could crawl between the plant's trichomes to reach
its feeding sites," said UOG Professor Thomas Marler. Trichomes are what
biologists call the hairs that can be found on many plant leaves and stems.
Unfortunately, the much larger beetle predator could not make the same journey
through the trichomes to feed on the scale insects that were feeding on the
plant beneath the trichomes.
Plant
hairs serve several functions, and one of those functions is to protect the
plant from insects. "The glitch in this situation was that the insect that
was excluded by the plant hairs was our beneficial insect that eats the scale
pest, and the insect that could just walk straight through the hairs was the
very pest we wished to control," said Marler.
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