Plant water stress and its consequences for herbivorous insects: A new synthesis

被引:561
作者
Huberty, AF [1 ]
Denno, RF [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Dept Entomol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
feeding guild; meta-analysis; outbreak dynamics; phytophagous insects; plant-stress; hypothesis; stress-induced plant physiology; turgor pressure; vote-counting analysis; water-stressed plants;
D O I
10.1890/03-0352
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Traditionally, herbivorous insects are thought to exhibit enhanced performance and outbreak dynamics on water-stressed host plants due to induced changes in plant physiology. Recent experimental studies, however, provide mixed support for this historical view. To test the plant-stress hypothesis (PSH), we employed two methods (the traditional vote-counting approach and meta-analysis) to assess published studies that investigated insect responses to experimentally induced water-deficit in plants. For insects, we examined how water deficit affects survivorship, fecundity, density, relative growth rate, and oviposition preference. Responses were analyzed by major feeding guild (sap-feeding insects and chewing insects) and for the subguilds of sap-feeders (phloem, mesophyll, and xylem feeders) and chewing insects (free-living chewers, borers, leaf miners, and gall-formers). Both vote counting and meta-analysis found strong negative effects of water stress on the performance of sap-feeding insects at large and on members of the phloem- and mesophyll-feeding subguilds in particular. Both analytical techniques demonstrated a nonsignificant response for chewing insects at large due to the offsetting effects of water stress on the different subguilds. For example, our analyses found consistent positive responses for borers, negative responses for gall-formers, and in consistent responses for free-living species and leaf miners. Overall, our analyses strongly challenge the historical view that herbivorous insects exhibit. elevated performance and outbreak dynamics on water-stressed plants. Rather, there is widespread evidence that many phytophagous insects, especially sap-feeders, are adversely affected by continuous water stress. Despite enhanced foliar nitrogen during times of plant stress, concurrent reductions in turgor and water content interfere with an herbivore's ability to access or utilize nitrogen. To explain the discrepancy between the observed outbreaks of phytophagous insects on water-stressed plants in nature and the negative effects detected in many experimental studies where plants are continuously stressed, we propose a "pulsed stress hypothesis" whereby bouts of stress and the recovery of turgor allow sap-feeders to benefit from stress-induced increases in plant nitrogen. Our finding that phloem-feeding insects respond positively on intermittently stressed plants but exhibit poor performance on continuously stressed ones is consistent with this hypothesis and suggests that the phenology of water stress as it mediates nitrogen availability may hold the key to understanding how water stress affects the population dynamics of insect herbivores.
引用
收藏
页码:1383 / 1398
页数:16
相关论文
共 80 条
[11]  
2
[12]   OSMOTIC POTENTIAL AND TURGOR MAINTENANCE IN SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA LOISEL [J].
DRAKE, BG ;
GALLAGHER, JL .
OECOLOGIA, 1984, 62 (03) :368-375
[13]   Drought-affected and injured trees attractive to bark beetles [J].
George, RAS .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY, 1930, 23 :825-828
[14]  
Gershenzon J., 1984, Phytochemical Adaptations to Stress, P273
[15]  
Gurevitch Jessica, 1993, P378
[16]   MECHANISMS OF RESISTANCE IN EUCALYPTUS AGAINST LARVAE OF THE EUCALYPTUS LONGHORNED BORER (COLEOPTERA, CERAMBYCIDAE) [J].
HANKS, LM ;
PAINE, TD ;
MILLAR, JG .
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1991, 20 (06) :1583-1588
[17]  
HAYNES R L, 1975, Hortscience, V10, P265
[18]   POTATO LEAFHOPPER (HOMOPTERA, CICADELLIDAE) LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS ON WATER-STRESSED ALFALFA IN THE EARLY REGROWTH AND BUD STAGE [J].
HOFFMAN, GD ;
HOGG, DB ;
BOUSH, GM .
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1991, 20 (04) :1058-1066
[19]  
HOFFMAN GD, 1990, ENTOMOL EXP APPL, V57, P165, DOI 10.1007/BF00343505
[20]   POTATO LEAFHOPPER (HOMOPTERA, CICADELLIDAE) IN WATER-STRESSED ALFALFA - POPULATION CONSEQUENCES AND FIELD-TESTS [J].
HOFFMAN, GD ;
HOGG, DB .
ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1991, 20 (04) :1067-1073