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Plant–eriophyoid mite interactions: cellular biochemistry and metabolic responses induced in mite-injured plants. Part I

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Abstract

This review is a comprehensive study of recent advances related to cytological, biochemical and physiological changes induced in plants in response to eriophyoid mite attack. It has been shown that responses of host plants to eriophyoids are variable. Most of the variability is due to individual eriophyoid mite–plant interactions. Usually, the direction and intensity of changes in eriophyoid-infested plant organs depend on mite genotype, density, or the feeding period, and are strongly differentiated relative to host plant species, cultivar, age and location. Although the mechanisms of changes elicited by eriophyoid mites within plants are not fully understood, in many cases the qualitative and quantitative biochemical status of mite-infested plants are known to affect the performance of consecutive herbivorous arthropods. In future, elucidation of the pathways from eriophyoid mite damage to plant gene activation will be necessary to clarify plant responses and to explain variation in plant tissue damage at the feeding and adjacent sites.

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Acknowledgments

The authors thank Prof. Jan Boczek and Don Griffiths for the helpful comments on the manuscript. The present work was supported partially by the Ministry of Science and Technology of Serbia (Grant #143006B).

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Correspondence to Radmila Petanović.

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Petanović, R., Kielkiewicz, M. Plant–eriophyoid mite interactions: cellular biochemistry and metabolic responses induced in mite-injured plants. Part I. Exp Appl Acarol 51, 61–80 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10493-010-9351-2

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