Phytochemical drivers of insect herbivory: a functional toolbox to support agroecological diversification

Author:

Grosjean Jeremy12,Pashalidou Foteini G.3,Fauvet Aude1,Baillet Aurore4,Kergunteuil Alan15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Université de Lorraine, LAE, INRAE, 54000 Nancy, France

2. Platform of Structural and Metabolomics Analyses, SF4242, EFABA, Lorraine University, Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy, France

3. Agronomie, INRAE, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Palaiseau, France

4. Terres Inovia, 9 rue de la Vologne, 54520 Laxou, France

5. INRAE, PSH, 84000 Avignon, France

Abstract

Plant metabolism is a key feature of biodiversity that remains underexploited in functional frameworks used in agroecology. Here, we study how phytochemical diversity considered at three organizational levels can promote pest control. In a factorial field experiment, we manipulated plant diversity in three monocultures and three mixed crops of oilseed rape to explore how intra- and interspecific phytochemical diversity affects pest infestation. We combined recent progress in metabolomics with classic metrics used in ecology to test a box of hypotheses grounded in plant defence theory. According to the hypothesis of ‘phytochemically mediated coevolution’, our study stresses the relationships between herbivore infestation and particular classes of specialized metabolites like glucosinolates. Among 178 significant relationships between metabolites and herbivory rates, only 20% were negative. At the plant level, phytochemical abundance and richness had poor predictive power on pest regulation. This challenges the hypothesis of ‘synergistic effects . At the crop cover level, in line with the hypothesis of ‘associational resistance’, the phytochemical dissimilarity between neighbouring plants limited pest infestation. We discuss the intricate links between associational resistance and bottom-up pest control. Bridging different levels of organization in agroecosystems helps to dissect the multi-scale relationships between phytochemistry and insect herbivory.

Funder

INRAE- AgroEcoSystem Department

Publisher

The Royal Society

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