Abstract
ABSTRACTArachis pintoi(Fabaceae) is a common relative of the cultivated peanut, and folds its four leaflets up to look like one at night. The adaptive significance of this behavior (foliar nyctinasty) is unknown. To test the hypothesis that leaflet folding alone can deter herbivores, a leaf preference experiment was performed onChromacris trogongrasshoppers. Small oval cutouts were made from leaves of the grasshopper’s preferred food source,Iochroma arborescens(Solanaceae), and were combined with small pieces of tape and dry grass to construct artificial leaves resembling the day and night form ofA. pintoi. In the experiment, groups of three grasshoppers were starved for 24 hours and then placed in petri dishes containing one closed and one open artificial leaf. After 30 six-hour trials, the average herbivory of open leaves was 12.3%, while closed leaves was 5.2% (p = 0.00145), indicating a significant preference for open leaves. This suggests that the folded configuration ofA. pintoileaves can be a defense against herbivory.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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