Simulation of early season herbivory via mechanical damage affects flower production in pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo ssp. pepo).

IF 3.6 2区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES Annals of botany Pub Date : 2024-08-02 DOI:10.1093/aob/mcae118
Hannah L Gray, Nicholas A Ivers, Leeah I Richardson, Margarita M López-Uribe, Shalene Jha
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Abstract

Background: Damage from insect herbivores can elicit a wide range of plant responses, including reduced or compensatory growth, altered volatile profiles, or increased production of defence compounds. Specifically, herbivory can alter floral development as plants reallocate resources towards defence and regrowth functions. For pollinator-dependent species, floral quantity and quality are critical for attracting floral visitors; thus, herbivore-induced developmental effects that alter either floral abundance or attractiveness may have critical implications for plant reproductive success. Based on past work on resource trade-offs, we hypothesize that herbivore damage-induced effects are stronger in structural floral traits that require significant resource investment (e.g., flower quantity), as plants reallocate resources towards defence and regrowth, and weaker in secondary floral traits that require less structural investment (e.g., nectar rewards).

Scope: In this study, we simulated early-season herbivore mechanical damage in the domesticated jack-o-lantern pumpkin Cucurbita pepo ssp. pepo and measured a diverse suite of floral traits over a 60-day greenhouse experiment.

Key results: We found that mechanical damage delayed the onset of male anthesis and reduced the total quantity of flowers produced. Additionally, permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) indicated that mechanical damage significantly impacts overall floral volatile profile, though not output of sesquiterpenoids, a class of compounds known to recruit specialized cucumber beetle herbivores and squash bee pollinators.

Conclusions: In summary, we show that C. pepo spp. pepo reduces investment in male flower production following mechanical damage, and that floral volatiles do exhibit shifts in production, indicative of damage-induced trait plasticity. Such reductions in male flower production could reduce the relative attractiveness of damaged plants to foraging pollinators in this globally relevant cultivated species.

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通过机械损伤模拟早季食草动物对南瓜(Cucurbita pepo ssp.)
背景:昆虫食草动物造成的损害可引起植物的多种反应,包括生长减少或补偿性生长、挥发性特征改变或防御化合物产量增加。具体来说,当植物将资源重新分配到防御和再生功能上时,食草动物会改变花的发育。对于依赖授粉者的物种来说,花的数量和质量对于吸引花的访客至关重要;因此,食草动物诱导的发育效应改变了花的数量或吸引力,可能会对植物的繁殖成功产生重要影响。根据过去的资源权衡研究,我们假设食草动物的破坏对需要大量资源投资的结构性花特征(如花量)的影响较强,因为植物会将资源重新分配到防御和再生上,而对需要较少结构性投资的次生花特征(如花蜜回报)的影响较弱:在这项研究中,我们模拟了驯化的南瓜(Cucurbita pepo ssp. pepo)在早季遭受食草动物机械破坏的情况,并在为期 60 天的温室实验中测量了各种花性状:主要结果:我们发现,机械损伤会推迟雄花花期的开始,并减少花朵的总产量。此外, permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) 表明,机械损伤会显著影响花的整体挥发性特征,但不会影响倍半萜类化合物的产量,倍半萜类化合物是一类已知能吸引专门的黄瓜甲虫食草动物和壁虱授粉昆虫的化合物:总之,我们的研究表明,辣椒属植物在受到机械损伤后会减少对雄花生产的投入,花挥发性物质的产量确实会发生变化,这表明了损伤引起的性状可塑性。这种雄花产量的减少可能会降低受损植物对这一全球相关栽培品种的授粉昆虫的相对吸引力。
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来源期刊
Annals of botany
Annals of botany 生物-植物科学
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
4.80%
发文量
138
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Annals of Botany is an international plant science journal publishing novel and rigorous research in all areas of plant science. It is published monthly in both electronic and printed forms with at least two extra issues each year that focus on a particular theme in plant biology. The Journal is managed by the Annals of Botany Company, a not-for-profit educational charity established to promote plant science worldwide. The Journal publishes original research papers, invited and submitted review articles, ''Research in Context'' expanding on original work, ''Botanical Briefings'' as short overviews of important topics, and ''Viewpoints'' giving opinions. All papers in each issue are summarized briefly in Content Snapshots , there are topical news items in the Plant Cuttings section and Book Reviews . A rigorous review process ensures that readers are exposed to genuine and novel advances across a wide spectrum of botanical knowledge. All papers aim to advance knowledge and make a difference to our understanding of plant science.
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