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Herbivore-induced volatile blends with both "fast" and "slow" components provide robust indirect defence in nature

Cited 45 time in Web of Science Cited 49 time in Scopus
Authors

Joo, Youngsung; Schuman, Meredith C.; Goldberg, Jay K.; Kim, Sang-Gyu; Yon, Felipe; Bruetting, Christoph; Baldwin, Ian T.

Issue Date
2018-01
Publisher
WILEY
Citation
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Vol.32 No.1, pp.136-149
Abstract
Plants emit volatile blends specific to particular herbivore interactions, which predators and parasitoids learn to associate with prey, increasing herbivore mortality and thereby plant fitness in a phenomenon termed indirect defence. Herbivore-induced plant volatile blends commonly include both rapid, transient green leaf volatiles (GLVs) and delayed, enduring sesquiterpenes. A few laboratory studies indicate that insects can use plant volatiles to time behaviour, but it is not known whether and how the temporal dynamics of plant volatile blends influence their function in indirect defence. We characterized the activity of the native herbivores Manduca sexta and Tupiocoris notatus and their predators, Geocoris spp., on their host plant Nicotiana attenuata in their natural habitat. Diurnal predator activity only partially overlapped with variable herbivore activity, and herbivore attack at the beginning or end of the photophase elicited plant volatile blends with distinct GLV and sesquiterpene profiles. In field trials, day-active Geocoris spp. predators preferred morning- over evening-typical GLV blends. Using plants genetically transformed so as to be unable to produce specific volatiles, we found that GLVs increased predation after dawn elicitations, whereas sesquiterpenes increased predation after dusk elicitations in field trials. We conclude that predators respond to temporal differences in plant volatile blends, and that the different dynamics of specific volatiles permit effective indirect defence despite variable herbivore activity in nature. A is available for this article.
ISSN
0269-8463
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/200894
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.12947
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, Plant Sciences, 생태학, 식물과학, 진화생물학

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