Soil–plant–gall relationships: from gall development to ecological patterns

Author:

Arriola Ígor Abba1ORCID,Costa Elaine Cotrim2ORCID,de Oliveira Denis Coelho3ORCID,Isaias Rosy Mary dos Santos1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany, Institute of Biological Sciences Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais Av. Antônio Carlos 6627, CP 486 Belo Horizonte Brazil

2. Institute of Biological Sciences/Botany Universidade Federal do Rio Grande Av. Itália Km 8, Campus Carreiros Rio Grande Brazil

3. Institute of Biology Universidade Federal de Uberlândia, Campus Umuarama Rua Ceará s/n Uberlândia Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe adaptive nature of the galler habit has been tentatively explained by the nutrition, microenvironment, and enemy hypotheses. Soil attributes have direct relationships with these three hypotheses at the cellular and macroecological scales, but their influence has been restricted previously to effects on the nutritional status of the host plant on gall richness and abundance. Herein, we discuss the ionome patterns within gall tissues and their significance for gall development, physiology, structure, and for the nutrition of the gallers. Previous ecological and chemical quantification focused extensively on nitrogen and carbon contents, evoking the carbon‐nutrient defence hypothesis as an explanation for establishing the plant–gall interaction. Different elements are involved in cell wall composition dynamics, antioxidant activity, and regulation of plant–gall water dynamics. An overview of the different soil–plant–gall relationships highlights the complexity of the nutritional requirements of gallers, which are strongly influenced by environmental soil traits. Soil and plant chemical profiles interact to determine the outcome of plant–herbivore interactions and need to be addressed by considering not only the soil features and galler nutrition but also the host plant's physiological traits. The quantitative and qualitative results for iron metabolism in gall tissues, as well as the roles of iron as an essential element in the physiology and reproduction of gallers suggest that it may represent a key nutritional resource, aligning with the nutrition hypothesis, and providing an integrative explanation for higher gall diversity in iron‐rich soils.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Publisher

Wiley

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