Impact of nectar composition and nectar yeasts on volatile emissions and parasitoid behavior
Authors
Sobhy, Islam S.Goelen, Tim
Wäckers, Felix
Verstrepen, Kevin J.
Wenseleers, Tom
Jacquemyn, Hans
Lievens, Bart
Affiliation
Cardiff University; KU Leuven; Suez Canal University; Flemish Institute for Technological Research; Lancaster University; KU Leuvain Center for MicrobiologyPublication Date
2025-03-06
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Nectar yeasts can significantly influence the scent of floral nectar and therefore the foraging behavior of flower-visiting insects. While these effects likely depend on nectar chemistry and yeast species, their joint impact on nectar volatile profiles and associated insect responses remain poorly understood. Here, we used four synthetic nectar types varying in sugar and amino acid concentration and two specialist nectar yeasts (Metschnikowia gruessii and Metschnikowia reukaufii) to investigate how nectar composition and yeast species affect volatile profiles and the olfactory responses of the generalist aphid parasitoid Aphidius ervi. Olfactometer assays showed that A. ervi females significantly preferred fermented nectars with high amino acid-low sugar content (HL) and low amino acid-high sugar (LH) content, regardless being fermented by M. gruessii or M. reukaufii, over non-inoculated nectars. This effect was not observed for nectars with low amino acid-low sugar (LL) and high amino acid-high sugar (HH) content. Moreover, LL nectar fermented with M. gruessii became even repellent to the parasitoids. GC–MS analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) revealed that VOC profiles of fermented nectars depended significantly on nectar type (i.e., chemical composition), yeast species, and their interaction. Whereas propyl acetate, isobutyl acetate, styrene, α-guaiene and pentyl-octanoate were associated with the LH fermented nectars, ethyl acetate and E-methyl isoeugenol were mainly associated with the HL fermented nectars, suggesting possible involvement in A. ervi attraction to these nectars. In contrast, isopropyl-hexadecanoate was associated with the non-attractive or repellent LL fermented nectars. Altogether, our results indicate that nectar composition has a strong impact on nectar scent when fermented by specialist nectar yeasts and subsequently on insect foraging behavior.Citation
Sobhy, I. S., Goelen, T., Wäckers, F., Verstrepen, K. J., Wenseleers, T., Jacquemyn, H., & Lievens, B. (2025). Impact of nectar composition and nectar yeasts on volatile emissions and parasitoid behavior. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 51, article-number 29. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-025-01587-1Publisher
SpringerJournal
Journal of Chemical EcologyAdditional Links
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10886-025-01587-1Type
ArticleLanguage
enDescription
© Crown 2025.ISSN
0098-0331EISSN
1573-1561Sponsors
This work was funded by a KU Leuven C3 grant (IOF-C32/15/020).ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s10886-025-01587-1
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


