Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, Vol. 101 (2001), No.2, pp. 199-206
Department of Biology, International Christian University
ABSTRACT. The influence of visual stimuli on female host location was investigated in Eurema hecabe (Lepidoptera: Pieridae). Mated females with no oviposition experience were presented with artificial plant models treated with the methanol extract of the host plant, Lespedeza cuneata (Fabaceae). When models of different colours were presented to females, they landed and deposited eggs predominantly on the yellow-green model. However, the size of the model was not important. When females were presented with simple square models and a model on which small squares were assembled, they chose predominantly the assembly model. This suggests that female discern the pattern which resembles the leaf of their main host plants, which consists of many small leaflets. However, the whole image of a leaf of the host plant is not an essential cue for host location, as females also chose the square with the central space more frequently than that without the space. We suggest that the long contour of a complicated form plays a role in female host location.