» Articles » PMID: 20096581

Changing Pollinators As a Means of Escaping Herbivores

Overview
Journal Curr Biol
Publisher Cell Press
Specialty Biology
Date 2010 Jan 26
PMID 20096581
Citations 46
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

All animal-pollinated plants must solve the problem of attracting pollinators while remaining inconspicuous to herbivores, a dilemma exacerbated when voracious larval-stage herbivores mature into important pollinators for a plant [1]. Herbivory is known to alter pollination rates, by altering flower number [2], size [3, 4], nectar production [5], seasonal timing of flowering [6], or pollinator behavior [7]. Nicotiana attenuata, a night-flowering tobacco that germinates after fires in the Southwestern United States, normally produces flowers that open at night and release benzyl acetone (BA) to attract night-active hawkmoth pollinators (Manduca quinquemaculata and M. sexta), which are both herbivores and pollinators. When plants are attacked by hawkmoth larvae, the plants produce flowers with reduced BA emissions that open in the morning and are preferentially pollinated by day-active hummingbirds. This dramatic change in flower phenology, which is elicited by oral secretions (OSs) from feeding hawkmoth larvae and requires jasmonate (JA) signal transduction, causes the majority of outcrossed seeds to be produced by pollinations from day-active hummingbirds rather than night-active hawkmoths. Because oviposition and nectaring are frequently coupled behaviors in hawkmoths, we propose that this OS-elicited, JA-mediated change in flower phenology complements similarly elicited responses to herbivore attack (direct defenses, indirect defenses, and tolerance responses) that reduce the risk and fitness consequences of herbivory to plants.

Citing Articles

Functional and ecological diversification of underground organs in .

Gagnon E, Baldaszti L, Moonlight P, Knapp S, Lehmann C, Sarkinen T Front Genet. 2023; 14:1231413.

PMID: 37886686 PMC: 10597785. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2023.1231413.


Insect exuviae as soil amendment affect flower reflectance and increase flower production and plant volatile emission.

Barragan-Fonseca K, Rusman Q, Mertens D, Weldegergis B, Peller J, Polder G Plant Cell Environ. 2022; 46(3):931-945.

PMID: 36514238 PMC: 10107842. DOI: 10.1111/pce.14516.


Mutualism has its limits: consequences of asymmetric interactions between a well-defended plant and its herbivorous pollinator.

Balbuena M, Broadhead G, Dahake A, Barnett E, Vergara M, Skogen K Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2022; 377(1853):20210166.

PMID: 35491593 PMC: 9058551. DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2021.0166.


Transgenerational changes in pod maturation phenology and seed traits of Glycine soja infested by the bean bug Riptortus pedestris.

Adachi-Fukunaga S, Nakabayashi Y, Tokuda M PLoS One. 2022; 17(3):e0263904.

PMID: 35235584 PMC: 8890626. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263904.


Synergism, Bifunctionality, and the Evolution of a Gradual Sensory Trade-off in Hummingbird Taste Receptors.

Cockburn G, Ko M, Sadanandan K, Miller E, Nakagita T, Monte A Mol Biol Evol. 2022; 39(2).

PMID: 34978567 PMC: 8826506. DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msab367.