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  4. A specialist root herbivore reduces plant resistance and uses an induced plant volatile to aggregate in a density-dependent manner

A specialist root herbivore reduces plant resistance and uses an induced plant volatile to aggregate in a density-dependent manner

Author(s)
Robert, Christelle Aurélie Maud
Erb, Matthias  
Laboratoire d'entomologie évolutive  
Hibbard, Bruce Elliott
French, B. W.
Zwahlen, Claudia  
Laboratoire de recherches fondamentales et appliquées en écologie chimique  
Turlings, Ted  
Laboratoire de recherches fondamentales et appliquées en écologie chimique  
Date issued
2012
In
Functional Ecology
Vol
6
No
26
From page
1429
To page
1440
Subjects
defence inducibility relaxation diabrotica virgifera virgifera induced susceptibility resource reallocation root-herbivore interactions zea mays western corn-rootworm below-ground herbivory cell-wall invertase larvae coleoptera water-stress arabidopsis-thaliana insect herbivores amino-acids maize chrysomelidae
Abstract
1. Leaf-herbivore attack often triggers induced resistance in plants. However, certain specialist herbivores can also take advantage of the induced metabolic changes. In some cases, they even manipulate plant resistance, leading to a phenomenon called induced susceptibility. Compared to above-ground plant-insect interactions, little is known about the prevalence and consequences of induced responses below-ground.
2. A recent study suggested that feeding by the specialist root herbivore Diabrotica virgifera virgifera makes maize roots more susceptible to conspecifics. To better understand this phenomenon, we conducted a series of experiments to study the behavioural responses and elucidate the underlying biochemical mechanisms.
3. We found that D. virgifera benefitted from feeding on a root system in groups of intermediate size (39 larvae/plant in the laboratory), whereas its performance was reduced in large groups (12 larvae/plant). Interestingly, the herbivore was able to select host plants with a suitable density of conspecifics by using the induced plant volatile (E)-beta-caryophyllene in a dose-dependent manner. Using a split root experiment, we show that the plant-induced susceptibility is systemic and, therefore, plant mediated. Chemical analyses on plant resource reallocation and defences upon herbivory showed that the systemic induced-susceptibility is likely to stem from a combination of (i) increased free amino acid concentrations and (ii) relaxation of defence inducibility.
4. These findings show that herbivores can use induced plant volatiles in a density-dependent manner to aggregate on a host plant and change its metabolism to their own benefit. Our study furthermore helps to explain the remarkable ecological success of D. virgifera in maize fields around the world.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/51780
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