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. 2018 Sep 26;13(10):e1444553. doi: 10.1080/15592324.2018.1444553

Corrigendum

PMCID: PMC6204845  PMID: 30257132

Title: Plant signals during beetle (Scolytus multistriatus) feeding in American elm (Ulmus americana Planch).

Authors: Saremba BM, Tymm FLM, Baethke K, Rheault MR, Sherif SM, Saxena PK, Murch SJ. **Please write out complete name, following conventional naming practice: first name middle initial last name

Journal: Plant Signaling & Behavior.

Bibliometrics: Volume 12, Issue 5 pages e1296997-XX.

DOI: 10.1080/15592324.2017.1296997

When the article was first published, the captions of some of the figures were incorrectly interchanged. The correct figures and their captions are given below.

The author apologizes for this error.

Figure 2.

Figure 2.

Rate of beetle (Scolytus multistriatus) collection in the summer of 2015. The blue bars represent the number of individual beetles caught on a given day. The orange points correspond to the daily mean temperature (http://kelowna.weatherstats.ca/).

Figure 4.

Figure 4.

Responses of elm meristems to beetle herbivory through spikes in serotonin. (A) Resting levels of serotonin. (B) Spiking levels of serotonin.

Figure 5.

Figure 5.

Responses of elm meristems to beetle herbivory through spikes in melatonin. (A) Resting levels of melatonin. (B) Spiking levels of melatonin.

Figure 6.

Figure 6.

Responses of elm meristems to beetle herbivory through spikes in abscisic acid. (A) Resting levels of abscisic acid. (B) Spiking levels of abscisic acid.

Figure 7.

Figure 7.

Responses of elm meristems to beetle herbivory through spikes in jasmonic acid. (A) Resting levels of jasmonic acid. (B) Spiking levels of jasmonic acid.

Figure 8.

Figure 8.

Collection and rearing of Scolytus multistriatus. (A) Field collection with a 3-vane panel trap. (B) Adult S. multistriatus trapped in Kelowna, BC. C. S. multistriatus egg-laying gallery. D. S. multistriatus eggs in the colony. E. Colony rearing chamber. Collection jars were fitted on to a bell ended PVC pipe that extrudes from the hole in the side of the chamber.

Figure 9.

Figure 9.

Beetles chewed elm meristems during the 24 hour exposure. (A) Elm meristem with female beetle burrowing, male beetle observing. (B) Histology of the beetle burrowing in the meristematic zone.


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