Affiliation:
1. Guangxi Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Conservation, College of Forestry Guangxi University Nanning Guangxi China
2. Guangxi Crop Genetic Improvement and Biotechnology Lab Guangxi Academy of Agricultural Sciences Nanning Guangxi China
Abstract
AbstractWhen plants are sequentially attacked by multiple herbivores, herbivore identity and host specialization can greatly influence the patterns of herbivore–herbivore and plant–herbivore interactions. However, how prior herbivory and the resulting induced plant responses potentially affect subsequent herbivores deserves further investigation. In this study, we conducted a common‐garden experiment that manipulated sequential herbivory by the specialist caterpillar Gadirtha fusca Pogue (Lepidoptera: Nolidae) and the generalist caterpillar Spodoptera litura (Fabricius) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) on Chinese tallow, Triadica sebifera (L.) Small (Euphorbiaceae). We tested how prior exposure to herbivores with different levels of host specialization affected the performance of subsequently arriving con‐ and heterospecifics, as well as plant growth and defense responses under subsequent herbivory. We found that prior exposure to the specialist G. fusca facilitated the performance of subsequent conspecifics, resulting in a significant decrease in the growth (height and stem diameter at ground level) of tallow plants. However, prior exposure to the generalist S. litura did not affect the feeding of subsequent con‐ or heterospecifics or the growth of tallow plants. Sequential herbivory by specialist and generalist conspecifics resulted in lower levels of tannins and flavonoids, respectively, in leaves of tallow plants, whereas sequential herbivory by the two species did not affect the levels of tannins or flavonoids, compared to a single damage event. We conclude that herbivore species‐specific plant responses appear to be more important than herbivore identity or specialization in determining herbivore–herbivore interactions and plant responses to sequential herbivore attack.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Subject
Insect Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference51 articles.
1. Variation in plant responsiveness to defense elicitors caused by genotype and environment;Bruce TJA;Frontiers in Plant Science,2014
2. Introduction, impact on native habitats, and management of a woody invader, the Chinese tallow tree, Sapium sebiferum (L.) Roxb;Bruce KA;Natural Areas Journal,1997
3. Plant defense strategies against attack by multiple herbivores
4. Plasticity in induced resistance to sequential attack by multiple herbivores in Brassica nigra
5. Plant-mediated interactions in herbivorous insects: mechanisms, symmetry, and challenging the paradigms of competition past