Host plant traits define the strategies of success to the Cecidomyiidae in a restinga environment

2022 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 751-759
Author(s):  
Elaine C. Costa ◽  
Gracielle P.P. Bragança ◽  
Ígor A. Arriola ◽  
Mariana S.C. Freitas ◽  
Rosy M.S. Isaias
Keyword(s):  
1993 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 839-845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael R. Wagner ◽  
Zhao-Yi Zhang

Phenotypic variation in defoliation of ponderosa pine, Pinusponderosa Laws., by the pine sawfly, Neodiprionfulviceps, is reported. Two field and one laboratory bioassays of paired phenotypically resistant and susceptible trees consistently indicated that sawfly egg, larval, and total survival were 5–14% lower on resistant trees. A suite of host-plant traits were assayed on resistant and susceptible trees including anatomical characteristics of the needles and concentration of terpene and nitrogen. Resistant trees had thicker outer cell layers, more fiber cells, higher toughness, and lower soluble nitrogen than susceptible trees. Resistant and susceptible trees were not distinguished by differences in terpenes. Generational survival of N. fulviceps was inversely related to foliage toughness and number of fiber cells.


Ecology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 93 (sp8) ◽  
pp. S211-S222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy J. S. Whitfeld ◽  
Vojtech Novotny ◽  
Scott E. Miller ◽  
Jan Hrcek ◽  
Petr Klimes ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Barbour ◽  
Sonya Erlandson ◽  
Kabir Peay ◽  
Brendan Locke ◽  
Erik S. Jules ◽  
...  

Host-plant genetic variation affects the diversity and composition of associated above and belowground communities. Most evidence supporting this view is derived from studies within a single common garden, thereby constraining the range of biotic and abiotic environmental conditions that might directly or indirectly (via phenotypic plasticity) affect communities. If natural variability in the environment renders host-plant genetic effects on associated communities unimportant, then studying the community-level consequences of genetic variation may not be warranted. We addressed this knowledge gap by planting a series of common gardens consisting of 10 different clones (genotypes) of the willow Salix hookeriana in a coastal dune ecosystem and manipulated natural variation in ant-aphid interactions (biotic) and wind exposure (abiotic) in two separate experiments. We then quantified the responses of associated species assemblages both above (foliar arthropods) and belowground (rhizosphere fungi and bacteria). In addition, we quantified plant phenotypic responses (plant growth, leaf quality, and root quality) to tease apart the effects of genetic variation, phenotypic plasticity, and direct environmental effects on associated communities. In the ant-aphid experiment, we found that willow genotype explained more variation in foliar arthropod communities than aphid additions and proximity to aphid-tending ant mounds. However, aphid additions modified willow genetic effects on arthropod community composition by attracting other aphid species to certain willow genotypes. In the wind experiment, wind exposure explained more variation than willow genotype in structuring communities of foliar arthropods and rhizosphere bacteria. Still, willow genotype had strong effect sizes on several community properties of arthropods and fungi, indicating that host-plant genetic variation remains important. Across both experiments, genetic variation in plant traits was more important than phenotypic plasticity in structuring associated communities. The relative importance of genetic variation vs. direct environmental effects though depended on the type of environmental gradient (G > E-aphid, but E-wind > G). Taken together, our results suggest that host-plant genetic variation is an important driver of above and belowground biodiversity, despite natural variation in the biotic and abiotic environment.


Botany ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 92 (4) ◽  
pp. 303-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven W. Kembel ◽  
Rebecca C. Mueller

The aerial surface of plants, known as the phyllosphere, represents a widespread and diverse habitat for microbes, but the fungal communities colonizing the surface of leaves are not well characterized, and how these communities are assembled on hosts is unknown. We used high-throughput sequencing of fungal communities on the leaves of 51 tree species in a lowland tropical rainforest in Panama to examine the influence of host plant taxonomy and traits on the fungi colonizing the phyllosphere. Fungal communities on leaves were dominated by the phyla Ascomycota (79% of all sequences), Basidiomycota (11%), and Chytridiomycota (5%). Host plant taxonomic identity explained more than half of the variation in fungal community composition across trees, and numerous host functional traits related to leaf morphology, leaf chemistry, and plant growth and mortality were significantly associated with fungal community structure. Differences in fungal biodiversity among hosts suggest that individual tree species support unique fungal communities and that diverse tropical forests also support a large number of fungal species. Similarities between phyllosphere and decomposer communities suggest that fungi inhabiting living leaves may have significant roles in ecosystem functioning in tropical forests.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louie H. Yang ◽  
Meredith L. Cenzer ◽  
Laura J. Morgan ◽  
Griffin W. Hall

AbstractSeasonal windows of opportunity represent intervals of time within a year during which organisms have improved prospects of achieving life history aims such as growth or reproduction, and may be commonly structured by temporal variation in abiotic factors, bottom-up factors, and top-down factors. Although seasonal windows of opportunity are likely to be common, few studies have examined the factors that structure seasonal windows of opportunity in time. Here, we experimentally manipulated host plant age in two milkweed species (Asclepias fascicularis and Asclepias speciosa) in order to investigate the role of plant species-specific and plant age-varying traits on the survival and growth of monarch caterpillars (Danaus plexippus). We show that the two plant species showed diverging trajectories of defense traits with increasing age. These species-specific and age-varying host plant traits significantly affected the growth and survival of monarch caterpillars through both resource quality- and resource quantity-based constraints. The effects of plant age on monarch developmental success were comparable to and sometimes larger than those of plant species identity. We conclude that species-specific and age-varying plant traits are likely to be important factors with the potential to structure seasonal windows of opportunity for monarch development, and examine the implications of these findings for both broader patterns in the ontogeny of plant defense traits and the specific ecology of milkweed-monarch interactions in a changing world.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Vives-Ingla ◽  
Javier Sala-Garcia ◽  
Constantí Stefanescu ◽  
Josep Peñuelas ◽  
Jofre Carnicer

ABSTRACTVegetation cover generates local microclimatic gradients in the understorey, being especially pronounced at narrow ecotones linking open and forested habitats (open–closed ecotones). They provide key habitats for multiple insect communities and may largely determine the exposure of herbivorous insects to the increasing impacts of climate change. We report parallel measurements of microclimatic variables, multiple host-plant traits, and oviposition behaviour in Mediterranean populations of two Pieris butterflies across ecotones of vegetation cover. Open microhabitats were significantly warmer, drier, and more exposed to thermal amplification, which increased temperatures to values affecting insect larval survival. Host plants advanced their reproductive phenology and were shorter. Open microhabitats also inhibited the development of shade-adapted plants (e.g. Alliaria petiolata), decreasing fruit production. In contrast, the reproduction of sun-adapted host plants (e.g. Lepidium draba) was vigorous in the open microhabitats and completely inhibited in closed microhabitats, which were exclusively inhabited by non-reproductive ramets. Key plant traits for the selection of oviposition sites by butterflies, such as foliar water and chlorophyll contents, varied significantly across the open– closed ecotones. Foliar water content was always lower in the open microhabitats, whereas foliar chlorophyll gradients differed between sun- and shade-adapted plants. The oviposition behavior of Pieris butterflies across the ecotones differed significantly between the thermotolerant species (P. rapae, preferentially selecting open microhabitats) and the thermosensitive species (P. napi, selecting microhabitats protected by vegetation cover), matching the values of thermal susceptibility estimated from parallel heat tolerance assays of the populations. The larvae of the thermotolerant Pieris species grew under completely different thermal conditions due to differential microhabitat selection, indicating marked interspecific differences in thermal exposure (5–10 °C). These results suggest that the impacts of global warming in these communities will likely be mediated by open–closed ecotones, which determine pronounced local variability in thermal exposure, oviposition placement, and host-plant traits affecting larval performance in summer.


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yulduzkhon Abdullaeva ◽  
Stefan Ratering ◽  
Binoy Ambika Manirajan ◽  
David Rosado-Porto ◽  
Sylvia Schnell ◽  
...  

The seed-transmitted microorganisms and the microbiome of the soil in which the plant grows are major drivers of the rhizosphere microbiome, a crucial component of the plant holobiont. The seed-borne microbiome can be even coevolved with the host plant as a result of adaptation and vertical transmission over generations. The reduced genome diversity and crossing events during domestication might have influenced plant traits that are important for root colonization by seed-borne microbes and also rhizosphere recruitment of microbes from the bulk soil. However, the impact of the breeding on seed-transmitted microbiome composition and the plant ability of microbiome selection from the soil remain unknown. Here, we analyzed both endorhiza and rhizosphere microbiome of two couples of genetically related wild and cultivated wheat species (Aegilops tauschii/Triticum aestivum and T. dicoccoides/T. durum) grown in three locations, using 16S rRNA gene and ITS2 metabarcoding, to assess the relative contribution of seed-borne and soil-derived microbes to the assemblage of the rhizosphere microbiome. We found that more bacterial and fungal ASVs are transmitted from seed to the endosphere of all species compared with the rhizosphere, and these transmitted ASVs were species-specific regardless of location. Only in one location, more microbial seed transmission occurred also in the rhizosphere of A. tauschii compared with other species. Concerning soil-derived microbiome, the most distinct microbial genera occurred in the rhizosphere of A. tauschii compared with other species in all locations. The rhizosphere of genetically connected wheat species was enriched with similar taxa, differently between locations. Our results demonstrate that host plant criteria for soil bank’s and seed-originated microbiome recruitment depend on both plants’ genotype and availability of microorganisms in a particular environment. This study also provides indications of coevolution between the host plant and its associated microbiome resulting from the vertical transmission of seed-originated taxa.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustafa Adhab

In order to survive in nature, different pathogens follow different procedures to manipulate their host plants for the pathogen favor. Plant viruses are not an exception of this rule. They are often found to alter the host plant traits in the way that affects the community of organisms in the host plant as well as the vectoring insects. It has been indicated that virus-infected plants are more preferable than virus-free plants with respect to the growth rates, longevity and reproduction of the vector. Viruses use several strategies in order to reprogram their host’s cell to make it more conducive to replication and spread. Consequently, phytohormone signaling pathway in virus-infected plants can be disrupted either directly or indirectly. In plants, there are hormone pathways contribute to all aspects of plant physiology. Sometimes, virus infection can be advantageous to the infected host by providing the plant with tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. This article summarizes some aspects where the virus found to reprogram the host’s cell to make it more conducive to virus’ cycle of life. It also provides an important basic knowledge about how biotic and abiotic stress affects the interaction among virus, vector and the host plant; this knowledge could open the gate to understand the effect of multi-stress effect on the host plant in future studies through recognizing the necessity for plants to have an integrated system of defense against different threats.


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