Geographic distribution of terpenoid chemotypes in Tanacetum vulgare mediates tansy aphid occurrence but not abundance

Author:

Rahimova Humay1ORCID,Neuhaus‐Harr Annika2ORCID,Clancy Mary V.13ORCID,Guo Yuan14ORCID,Junker Robert R.5ORCID,Ojeda‐Prieto Lina2ORCID,Petrén Hampus5ORCID,Senft Matthias26ORCID,Zytynska Sharon E.27ORCID,Weisser Wolfgang W.2ORCID,Heinen Robin2ORCID,Schnitzler Jörg‐Peter1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Unit Environmental Simulation, Helmholtz Munich Neuherberg Germany

2. Terrestrial Ecology Research Group, Department of Life Science Systems, School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich Freising Germany

3. Fundamental and Applied Research in Chemical Ecology, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel Neuchâtel Switzerland

4. Institute of Plant Protection, Beijing Academy of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences Beijing China

5. Department of Biology, Evolutionary Ecology of Plants, Philipps‐University Marburg Marburg Germany

6. Data Processing Department, Julius Kühn Institute (JKI) – Federal Research Centre for Cultivated Plants Kleinmachnow Germany

7. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Behaviour, Institute of Infection, Veterinary and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

Abstract

Intraspecific variation of specialized metabolites in plants, such as terpenoids, are used to determine chemotypes. Tansy Tanacetum vulgare exhibits diverse terpenoid profiles that affect insect communities. However, it is not fully known whether patterns of their chemical composition and associated insects vary beyond the community scale. Here, we investigated the geographic distribution of mono‐ and sesquiterpenoid chemotypes in tansy leaves and their relationships with specific insect communities across Germany. We sampled tansy leaves from ten plants with and five plants without aphids in each of 26 sites along a north–south and west–east transect in Germany. Hexane‐extracted metabolites from leaf tissues were analyzed by gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry (GC‐MS). Plant morphological traits, aphid occurrence and abundance, and occurrence of ants were recorded locally. The effect of plant chemotype, plant morphological parameters, and abiotic site parameters such as soil types, temperature and precipitation on insect occurrences were analyzed. Plants clustered into four monoterpenoid and four sesquiterpenoid chemotype classes. Monoterpene classes differed in their latitudinal distribution, whereas sesquiterpenes were more evenly distributed across the transect. Aphid and ant occurrence was influenced by monoterpenoids. Plants of monoterpenoid class 1 were colonized by aphids and ants significantly more often than expected by chance, whereas in other classes there were no significant differences. Aphid abundance was affected by soil type, and average annual temperature positively correlated with the occurrence of ants. We found significant geographic patterns in the distribution of tansy chemodiversity and show that monoterpenoids affect aphid and ant occurrence, while the soil type can influence aphid abundance. We show that geographic variation in plant chemistry influences insect community assembly on tansy plants.

Publisher

Wiley

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