Herbicidal interference: glyphosate drives both the ecology and evolution of plant–herbivore interactions

IF 8.3 1区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES New Phytologist Pub Date : 2024-11-20 DOI:10.1111/nph.20238
Grace M. Zhang, Regina S. Baucom
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Indeed, interactions between plants and herbivores can reciprocally influence their respective evolutionary trajectories – herbivores exert selective pressure on plants, leading to the evolution and diversification of anti-herbivory defenses; in turn, evolutionary responses to herbivory can alter the ecological conditions in which plants and herbivores interact (Agrawal <i>et al</i>., <span>2006</span>). Such eco-evolutionary feedback loops can occur in the context of human-mediated forms of stress like those associated with agricultural regimes, urbanization, and climate change (Turcotte <i>et al</i>., <span>2017</span>; Hamann <i>et al</i>., <span>2021</span>; Santangelo <i>et al</i>., <span>2022</span>). However, how these human-mediated stressors alter plant–herbivore interactions and thus the broader eco-evolutionary dynamic between plants and their insect herbivores remains a significant gap in our knowledge.</p>\n<p>Chemical herbicides are a relatively novel form of human-mediated selection used in agricultural ecosystems to control and eradicate weedy plants (Shaner, <span>2014</span>). Unfortunately, plants have quickly adapted to herbicide use; to date there are hundreds of weed species that are considered either resistant or tolerant to some form of herbicide (Baucom &amp; Mauricio, <span>2004</span>; Vila-Aiub <i>et al</i>., <span>2009</span>; Délye <i>et al</i>., <span>2013</span>). Most work addressing natural weeds and herbicide use examines some aspect of the evolution of resistance or tolerance in plant populations – whether focusing on the frequency of resistance or tolerance, the genetic basis of either defense trait, or the potential for fitness costs associated with herbicide defense (Baucom, <span>2019</span>). Far fewer studies consider the consequences of herbicides on nontarget organisms such as herbivorous insects or pollinators within the weed community (Motta <i>et al</i>., <span>2018</span>, <span>2020</span>). While some research has examined how herbicide exposure may directly influence insect development, fitness, and immune responses (Schneider <i>et al</i>., <span>2009</span>; Baglan <i>et al</i>., <span>2018</span>; Capinera, <span>2018</span>; Smith <i>et al</i>., <span>2021</span>), the potential for indirect effects of herbicide – where herbicide exposure alters or changes some aspect of the plants that subsequently impacts insects or other community members (Fuchs <i>et al</i>., <span>2021</span>) – is less understood. This is a notable knowledge gap because plant chemistry, physiology, and phenology are directly altered by herbicide exposure (Baucom <i>et al</i>., <span>2008</span>; Londo <i>et al</i>., <span>2014</span>; de Freitas-Silva <i>et al</i>., <span>2022</span>); additionally, aspects of plant size and the mating system have evolved along with herbicide resistance (Van Etten <i>et al</i>., <span>2016</span>; Kuester <i>et al</i>., <span>2017</span>). Each of these changes – whether trait changes due to exposure, or trait alterations due to correlated evolution with herbicide resistance – has the potential to interfere with established interactions between plants and insect herbivores, pollinators, and other organisms.</p>\n<p>There is evidence that plant herbivory specifically may be impacted by herbicide. For example, in glyphosate-tolerant <i>Beta vulgaris</i> (sugar beet), glyphosate application led to an increase in the herbivore <i>Myzus persicae</i> (green peach aphid) (Dewar <i>et al</i>., <span>2000</span>). Similarly, <i>Abutilon theophrasti</i> (velvetleaf) exposed to low doses of the herbicide dicamba show an elevated abundance of the phloem-feeding <i>Bemisia tabaci</i> (silverleaf whitefly) (Johnson &amp; Baucom, <span>2022</span>). Additionally, four herbicides (2,4-D, Command, Newpath, Ricebeaux) applied to <i>Oryza sativa</i> (rice) modestly but differentially affected the abundance levels of the tissue-consuming <i>Lissorhoptrus oryzophilus</i> (rice water weevil) and the herbivory damage inflicted by stem-boring beetles (Kraus &amp; Stout, <span>2019</span>). The consequences of such altered herbivory experienced by herbicide-exposed plants are generally unknown on both the part of the plant and the insect herbivore. For example, does an increased abundance of an herbivore due to herbicide application lead to greater selective pressure than the plant population would normally experience? Or do different types of feeding result, potentially influencing both the trajectory of herbivory resistance in plants and the herbivore population/community in unexpected ways? It is also unknown if plants exposed to herbivory and herbicide simultaneously may eventually evolve higher levels of resistance to both stressors.</p>\n<p>At the same time, there is also the possibility that plants may experience a trade-off between defense to herbicide and herbivory, which could lead to a constraint on the evolution of increased levels of either trait (Simms &amp; Rausher, <span>1987</span>). Indeed, there have been trade-offs detected between constitutive and induced anti-herbivory defenses (Koricheva <i>et al</i>., <span>2004</span>), between resistance to different herbivore species (Agrawal <i>et al</i>., <span>1999</span>), and between the defense strategies of resistance and tolerance to the same threat (van der Meijden <i>et al</i>., <span>1988</span>; Fineblum &amp; Rausher, <span>1995</span>; Baucom &amp; Mauricio, <span>2008</span>). However, the evidence that trade-offs exist between herbivory and herbicide defense is more limited; one example showed that <i>Amaranthus hybridus</i> (smooth pigweed) plants resistant to the herbicide triazine were more susceptible to the specialist herbivore <i>Disonycha glabrata</i> (striped flea beetle) as compared to triazine-susceptible plants (Gassmann &amp; Futuyma, <span>2005</span>). It is possible that trade-offs between herbicide and herbivory resistance exist but remain undetected only due to the small number of studies on this topic to date.</p>\n<p>Here, we consider plant–herbivore interactions in the context of an herbicide-exposed plant population. As human activity has become a primary driver of global change, human-mediated stressors may impact plant–herbivore interactions, thereby potentially altering plant evolutionary responses, which could subsequently feed back to and reshape the ecological context within which plant herbivory is occurring. Our goal is to investigate the effects of a novel but strong selective agent – herbicide – on long-standing plant–herbivore relationships using <i>Ipomoea purpurea</i> (common morning glory). We specifically examine both the ecological effects of herbicide exposure on insect herbivory and the potential for evolutionary consequences of herbicide resistance on the evolution of herbivory resistance. To this end, we ask the following questions regarding ecological impacts: (1) Does glyphosate application affect insect herbivory levels and/or chewing damage patterns? If so, glyphosate has the potential to alter plant–herbivore interactions and thus indirectly moderate the insect herbivore community by favoring the feeding of certain herbivores over others. We further ask: (2) Is there a trade-off between glyphosate and herbivory resistance? The existence of a trade-off would indicate that the two forms of resistance may be mutually exclusive, which may evolutionarily constrain the evolution of either form of resistance. Finally, we examine the potential evolutionary consequences and ask: (3) Is there potential for these resistance traits to further evolve? If so, and a trade-off is present, then not only may plant populations start to diverge based on their resistance strategies, but their associated insect herbivore communities may diverge as well, as herbivores adapt to the evolving plants that form their diet. By answering these questions, our study begins to uncover the eco-evolutionary effects that herbicide may exert on plant–herbivore communities.</p>","PeriodicalId":214,"journal":{"name":"New Phytologist","volume":"108 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":8.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"New Phytologist","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.20238","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PLANT SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction

Plants have coexisted and interacted with insect herbivores for > 400 million years (Ehrlich & Raven, 1964; Labandeira & Currano, 2013), with such interactions influencing the evolution of plant traits, population dynamics, and even community stability (Myers & Sarfraz, 2017; De-la-Cruz et al., 2020; Agrawal & Maron, 2022). Indeed, interactions between plants and herbivores can reciprocally influence their respective evolutionary trajectories – herbivores exert selective pressure on plants, leading to the evolution and diversification of anti-herbivory defenses; in turn, evolutionary responses to herbivory can alter the ecological conditions in which plants and herbivores interact (Agrawal et al., 2006). Such eco-evolutionary feedback loops can occur in the context of human-mediated forms of stress like those associated with agricultural regimes, urbanization, and climate change (Turcotte et al., 2017; Hamann et al., 2021; Santangelo et al., 2022). However, how these human-mediated stressors alter plant–herbivore interactions and thus the broader eco-evolutionary dynamic between plants and their insect herbivores remains a significant gap in our knowledge.

Chemical herbicides are a relatively novel form of human-mediated selection used in agricultural ecosystems to control and eradicate weedy plants (Shaner, 2014). Unfortunately, plants have quickly adapted to herbicide use; to date there are hundreds of weed species that are considered either resistant or tolerant to some form of herbicide (Baucom & Mauricio, 2004; Vila-Aiub et al., 2009; Délye et al., 2013). Most work addressing natural weeds and herbicide use examines some aspect of the evolution of resistance or tolerance in plant populations – whether focusing on the frequency of resistance or tolerance, the genetic basis of either defense trait, or the potential for fitness costs associated with herbicide defense (Baucom, 2019). Far fewer studies consider the consequences of herbicides on nontarget organisms such as herbivorous insects or pollinators within the weed community (Motta et al., 2018, 2020). While some research has examined how herbicide exposure may directly influence insect development, fitness, and immune responses (Schneider et al., 2009; Baglan et al., 2018; Capinera, 2018; Smith et al., 2021), the potential for indirect effects of herbicide – where herbicide exposure alters or changes some aspect of the plants that subsequently impacts insects or other community members (Fuchs et al., 2021) – is less understood. This is a notable knowledge gap because plant chemistry, physiology, and phenology are directly altered by herbicide exposure (Baucom et al., 2008; Londo et al., 2014; de Freitas-Silva et al., 2022); additionally, aspects of plant size and the mating system have evolved along with herbicide resistance (Van Etten et al., 2016; Kuester et al., 2017). Each of these changes – whether trait changes due to exposure, or trait alterations due to correlated evolution with herbicide resistance – has the potential to interfere with established interactions between plants and insect herbivores, pollinators, and other organisms.

There is evidence that plant herbivory specifically may be impacted by herbicide. For example, in glyphosate-tolerant Beta vulgaris (sugar beet), glyphosate application led to an increase in the herbivore Myzus persicae (green peach aphid) (Dewar et al., 2000). Similarly, Abutilon theophrasti (velvetleaf) exposed to low doses of the herbicide dicamba show an elevated abundance of the phloem-feeding Bemisia tabaci (silverleaf whitefly) (Johnson & Baucom, 2022). Additionally, four herbicides (2,4-D, Command, Newpath, Ricebeaux) applied to Oryza sativa (rice) modestly but differentially affected the abundance levels of the tissue-consuming Lissorhoptrus oryzophilus (rice water weevil) and the herbivory damage inflicted by stem-boring beetles (Kraus & Stout, 2019). The consequences of such altered herbivory experienced by herbicide-exposed plants are generally unknown on both the part of the plant and the insect herbivore. For example, does an increased abundance of an herbivore due to herbicide application lead to greater selective pressure than the plant population would normally experience? Or do different types of feeding result, potentially influencing both the trajectory of herbivory resistance in plants and the herbivore population/community in unexpected ways? It is also unknown if plants exposed to herbivory and herbicide simultaneously may eventually evolve higher levels of resistance to both stressors.

At the same time, there is also the possibility that plants may experience a trade-off between defense to herbicide and herbivory, which could lead to a constraint on the evolution of increased levels of either trait (Simms & Rausher, 1987). Indeed, there have been trade-offs detected between constitutive and induced anti-herbivory defenses (Koricheva et al., 2004), between resistance to different herbivore species (Agrawal et al., 1999), and between the defense strategies of resistance and tolerance to the same threat (van der Meijden et al., 1988; Fineblum & Rausher, 1995; Baucom & Mauricio, 2008). However, the evidence that trade-offs exist between herbivory and herbicide defense is more limited; one example showed that Amaranthus hybridus (smooth pigweed) plants resistant to the herbicide triazine were more susceptible to the specialist herbivore Disonycha glabrata (striped flea beetle) as compared to triazine-susceptible plants (Gassmann & Futuyma, 2005). It is possible that trade-offs between herbicide and herbivory resistance exist but remain undetected only due to the small number of studies on this topic to date.

Here, we consider plant–herbivore interactions in the context of an herbicide-exposed plant population. As human activity has become a primary driver of global change, human-mediated stressors may impact plant–herbivore interactions, thereby potentially altering plant evolutionary responses, which could subsequently feed back to and reshape the ecological context within which plant herbivory is occurring. Our goal is to investigate the effects of a novel but strong selective agent – herbicide – on long-standing plant–herbivore relationships using Ipomoea purpurea (common morning glory). We specifically examine both the ecological effects of herbicide exposure on insect herbivory and the potential for evolutionary consequences of herbicide resistance on the evolution of herbivory resistance. To this end, we ask the following questions regarding ecological impacts: (1) Does glyphosate application affect insect herbivory levels and/or chewing damage patterns? If so, glyphosate has the potential to alter plant–herbivore interactions and thus indirectly moderate the insect herbivore community by favoring the feeding of certain herbivores over others. We further ask: (2) Is there a trade-off between glyphosate and herbivory resistance? The existence of a trade-off would indicate that the two forms of resistance may be mutually exclusive, which may evolutionarily constrain the evolution of either form of resistance. Finally, we examine the potential evolutionary consequences and ask: (3) Is there potential for these resistance traits to further evolve? If so, and a trade-off is present, then not only may plant populations start to diverge based on their resistance strategies, but their associated insect herbivore communities may diverge as well, as herbivores adapt to the evolving plants that form their diet. By answering these questions, our study begins to uncover the eco-evolutionary effects that herbicide may exert on plant–herbivore communities.

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除草剂干扰:草甘膦推动植物与食草动物相互作用的生态学和进化
引言 植物与昆虫食草动物共存和相互作用已有 4 亿年之久(Ehrlich &amp; Raven, 1964; Labandeira &amp; Currano, 2013),这种相互作用影响着植物性状、种群动态甚至群落稳定性的进化(Myers &amp; Sarfraz, 2017; De-la-Cruz et al.)事实上,植物与食草动物之间的相互作用会相互影响各自的进化轨迹--食草动物对植物施加选择性压力,导致反食草防御系统的进化和多样化;反过来,对食草动物的进化反应也会改变植物与食草动物相互作用的生态条件(Agrawal 等人,2006 年)。这种生态进化反馈回路可能发生在人类介导的压力形式背景下,如与农业制度、城市化和气候变化相关的压力(Turcotte 等人,2017 年;Hamann 等人,2021 年;Santangelo 等人,2022 年)。然而,这些人类介导的压力因素如何改变植物与食草动物之间的相互作用,进而改变植物与其昆虫食草动物之间更广泛的生态进化动态,仍然是我们知识中的一大空白。化学除草剂是一种相对新颖的人类介导选择形式,用于农业生态系统控制和根除杂草植物(Shaner,2014 年)。不幸的是,植物很快就适应了除草剂的使用;迄今为止,有数百种杂草被认为对某种形式的除草剂具有抗性或耐受性(Baucom &amp; Mauricio, 2004; Vila-Aiub 等人, 2009; Délye 等人, 2013)。大多数针对天然杂草和除草剂使用的研究都会考察植物种群中抗性或耐受性进化的某些方面--无论是关注抗性或耐受性的频率,还是防御特征的遗传基础,抑或是与除草剂防御相关的潜在适应成本(Baucom,2019 年)。考虑除草剂对杂草群落中食草昆虫或传粉昆虫等非目标生物影响的研究要少得多(Motta 等人,2018 年,2020 年)。虽然一些研究已经探讨了除草剂暴露如何直接影响昆虫的发育、适应性和免疫反应(Schneider 等人,2009 年;Baglan 等人,2018 年;Capinera,2018 年;Smith 等人,2021 年),但对除草剂间接影响的潜在可能性--即除草剂暴露会改变或改变植物的某些方面,进而影响昆虫或其他群落成员(Fuchs 等人,2021 年)--的了解却较少。这是一个明显的知识空白,因为植物化学、生理和物候会因接触除草剂而直接改变(Baucom 等人,2008 年;Londo 等人,2014 年;de Freitas-Silva 等人,2022 年);此外,植物大小和交配系统的某些方面也会随着除草剂抗性而进化(Van Etten 等人,2016 年;Kuester 等人,2017 年)。这些变化中的每一种--无论是因接触除草剂而导致的性状变化,还是因与除草剂抗性相关的进化而导致的性状改变--都有可能干扰植物与昆虫食草动物、授粉者和其他生物之间的既定互动关系。例如,在耐草甘膦的甜菜(Beta vulgaris)中,施用草甘膦会导致食草动物桃蚜(Myzus persicae)的增加(Dewar 等人,2000 年)。同样,暴露于低剂量除草剂麦草畏(dicamba)的绒毛草(Abutilon theophrasti)显示,以韧皮部为食的银叶粉虱(Bemisia tabaci)数量增加(Johnson &amp; Baucom, 2022)。此外,在水稻上施用四种除草剂(2,4-D、Command、Newpath、Ricebeaux)会适度但不同程度地影响消耗组织的稻水象鼻虫(Lissorhoptrus oryzophilus)的数量水平以及茎蛀甲虫造成的草食危害(Kraus &amp; Stout,2019 年)。暴露于除草剂的植物和昆虫食草动物经历的这种食草变化的后果通常是未知的。例如,施用除草剂导致的食草动物数量增加是否会给植物种群带来比正常情况下更大的选择性压力?或者是否会导致不同类型的取食,从而可能以意想不到的方式影响植物和食草动物种群/群落的抗药性轨迹?同时,植物也有可能在防御除草剂和食草动物之间进行权衡,这可能会限制其中任一性状水平的提高(Simms &ampamp; Rausher, 1987)。事实上,在组成型抗食草动物防御和诱导型抗食草动物防御之间已经发现了权衡(Koricheva et al.
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New Phytologist
New Phytologist 生物-植物科学
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期刊介绍: New Phytologist is an international electronic journal published 24 times a year. It is owned by the New Phytologist Foundation, a non-profit-making charitable organization dedicated to promoting plant science. The journal publishes excellent, novel, rigorous, and timely research and scholarship in plant science and its applications. The articles cover topics in five sections: Physiology & Development, Environment, Interaction, Evolution, and Transformative Plant Biotechnology. These sections encompass intracellular processes, global environmental change, and encourage cross-disciplinary approaches. The journal recognizes the use of techniques from molecular and cell biology, functional genomics, modeling, and system-based approaches in plant science. Abstracting and Indexing Information for New Phytologist includes Academic Search, AgBiotech News & Information, Agroforestry Abstracts, Biochemistry & Biophysics Citation Index, Botanical Pesticides, CAB Abstracts®, Environment Index, Global Health, and Plant Breeding Abstracts, and others.
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Meta-analysis reveals globally sourced commercial mycorrhizal inoculants fall short Trade-offs involved in the choice of pot vs field experiments Herbicidal interference: glyphosate drives both the ecology and evolution of plant–herbivore interactions Matthew Naish A nuclear phylogenomic tree of grasses (Poaceae) recovers current classification despite gene tree incongruence
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