Rieta Gols's research
Rieta Gols's research focuses on Chemical ecology of plant-insect interactions
Chemical ecology of plant-insect interactions
My research involves the chemical ecology of plant-insect interactions. I am especially interested in genetic variation in plant chemistry and how this affects interactions between insect herbivores (Lepidoptera) and their natural enemies (parasitoids). As a model system I study plants in the Brassicaceae family, which include important vegetables (e.g. cabbage) and oil seed crops (mustards), and their specialist and generalist herbivorous insects. Plant species in the Brassicaceae characteristically produce secondary metabolites called glucosinolates that have been demonstrated to play an important in the interactions with insect herbivores. My ‘pet’ plant species is wild Brassica oleracea originating from the Dorset coast in the UK and is the ancestral line of cultivated cabbage varieties. Different wild populations of this plant species vary in secondary chemistry, both glucosinolates and volatile metabolites. Volatile products that are emitted by plants when damaged by herbivores, so called herbivore induced plant volatiles (HIPVs), play an important role in foraging behaviour of natural enemies such as parasitic wasps. I am interested in how parasitoids of insect herbivores feeding on brassicaceous plant species use the infochemichals to find their herbivorous hosts. This process is complicated by the fact that the caterpillars feeding on plant species in the Brassicaceae do not restrict themselves to single plant species and different plant species emit HIPV blend that vary considerably both quantitatively and qualitatively. My aim is to reveal how parasitoids deal with this enormous variation to find their hosts in complex environments
Collaborations:
My research is conducted in collaboration with Jeffrey Harvey (Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Wageningen), Nicole van Dam (Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands), James Bullock, Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Wallingford, UK and Michael Reichelt (Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena Germany).
Publications
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Development of a hyperparasitoid wasp in different stages of its primary parasitoid and secondary herbivore hosts
Journal of Insect Physiology 58 (2012)11. - ISSN 0022-1910 - p. 1463 - 1468. -
The roles of ecological fitting, phylogeny and physiological equivalence in understanding realized and fundamental host ranges in endoparasitoid wasps
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 25 (2012)10. - ISSN 1010-061X - p. 2139 - 2148. -
Plant Volatiles Induced by Herbivore Egg Deposition Affect Insects of Different Trophic Levels
PLoS ONE 7 (2012)8. - ISSN 1932-6203 -
Dynamics of plant secondary metabolites and consequences for food chains and community dynamics. Chapter Sixteen.
In: The Ecology of Plant Secondary Metabolites: From Genes to Global Processes / , Iason, G.R., Dicke, M., Hartley, S.E.. - Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press (Ecological Reviews ) - ISBN 9780521157124 - p. 308 - 328. -
Preface : Special Issue of the 14th International Symposium on Insect-Plant Interactions
Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata 144 (2012)1. - ISSN 0013-8703 - p. 1 - 1. -
The effect of different dietary sugars and honey on longevity and fecundity in two hyperparasitoid wasps
Journal of Insect Physiology 58 (2012)6. - ISSN 0022-1910 - p. 816 - 823. -
Consequences of constitutive and induced variation in the host's food plant quality for parasitoid larval development
Journal of Insect Physiology 58 (2012)3. - ISSN 0022-1910 - p. 367 - 375. -
Herbivore-Mediated Effects of Glucosinolates on Different Natural Enemies of a Specialist Aphid
Journal of Chemical Ecology 38 (2012)1. - ISSN 0098-0331 - p. 100 - 115. -
Intrinsic competition among solitary and gregarious endoparasitoid wasps and the phenomenon of ‘resource sharing’
Ecological Entomology 37 (2012)1. - ISSN 0307-6946 - p. 65 - 74. -
Bidirectional Secretions from Glandular Trichomes (AQ1) of Pyrethrum (Tanacetum cinerariifolium) Enable Immunization of Seedlings
The Plant Cell 24 (2012)10. - ISSN 1040-4651 - p. 4252 - 4265.