Can plants betray the presence of multiple herbivore species to predators and parasitoids? The role of learning in phytochemical information networks

被引:60
作者
Takabayashi, J
Sabelis, MW
Janssen, A
Shiojiri, K
van Wijk, M
机构
[1] Kyoto Univ, Ctr Ecol Res, Otsu, Shiga 5202113, Japan
[2] Univ Amsterdam, Sect Populat Biol, Inst Biodivers & Ecosyst Dynam, NL-1090 GB Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
herbivore-induced plant volatiles; predator; prey; phytochemicals;
D O I
10.1007/s11284-005-0129-7
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
In response to feeding by phytophagous arthropods, plants emit volatile chemicals. This is shown to be an active physiological response of the plant and the released chemicals are therefore called herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPV). One of the supposed functions of HIPV for the plant is to attract carnivorous natural enemies of herbivores. Depending on which plant and herbivore species interact, blends of HIPV show qualitative and quantitative variation. Hence, one may ask whether this allows the natural enemies to discriminate between volatiles from plants infested by herbivore species that are either suitable or unsuitable as a food source for the natural enemy. Another question is whether natural enemies can also recognise HIPV when two or more herbivore species that differ in suitability as a food source simultaneously attack the same plant species. By reviewing the literature we show that arthropod predators and parasitoids can tell different HIPV blends apart in several cases of single plant-single herbivore systems and even in single plant-multiple herbivore systems. Yet, there are also cases where predators and parasitoids do not discriminate or discriminate only after having learned the association between HIPV and herbivores that are either suitable or non-suitable as a source of food. In this case, suitable herbivores may profit from colonising plants that are already infested by another non-suitable herbivore. The resulting temporal or partial refuge may have important population dynamical consequences, as such refuges have been shown to stabilise otherwise unstable predator-prey models of the Lotka-Volterra or Nicholson-Bailey type.
引用
收藏
页码:3 / 8
页数:6
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]   Consequences of thrips-infested plants for attraction of conspecifics and parasitoids [J].
Agrawal, AA ;
Colfer, RG .
ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 2000, 25 (04) :493-496
[2]   An elicitor of plant volatiles from beet armyworm oral secretion [J].
Alborn, HT ;
Turlings, TCJ ;
Jones, TH ;
Stenhagen, G ;
Loughrin, JH ;
Tumlinson, JH .
SCIENCE, 1997, 276 (5314) :945-949
[3]   Identification and synthesis of volicitin and related components from beet armyworm oral secretions [J].
Alborn, HT ;
Jones, TH ;
Stenhagen, GS ;
Tumlinson, JH .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY, 2000, 26 (01) :203-220
[4]  
Ament K., 2004, PLANT PHYSIOL, V135, P1, DOI DOI 10.1104/PP.103.038315
[5]  
[Anonymous], 1978, MONOGRAPHS POPULATIO
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1993, INSECT LEARNING ECOL
[7]   Volatiles from whitefly-infested plants elicit a host-locating response in the parasitoid, Encarsia formosa [J].
Birkett, MA ;
Chamberlain, K ;
Guerrieri, E ;
Pickett, JA ;
Wadhams, LJ ;
Yasuda, T .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY, 2003, 29 (07) :1589-1600
[8]   Spider mite-induced (3S)-(E)-nerolidol synthase activity in cucumber and lima bean.: The first dedicated step in acyclic C11-homoterpene biosynthesis [J].
Bouwmeester, HJ ;
Verstappen, FWA ;
Posthumus, MA ;
Dicke, M .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 121 (01) :173-180
[9]   Predatory mites learn to discriminate between plant volatiles induced by prey and nonprey herbivores [J].
De Boer, JG ;
Snoeren, TAL ;
Dicke, M .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2005, 69 :869-879
[10]   Identification of volatiles that are used in discrimination between plants infested with prey or nonprey herbivores by a predatory mite [J].
De Boer, JG ;
Posthumus, MA ;
Dicke, M .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY, 2004, 30 (11) :2215-2230