Effects of insect herbivory on induced chemical defences and compensation during early plant development in Penstemon virgatus

Quintero, Carolina; Bowers, M. Deane

Abstract

--- - The lack of studies assessing the simultaneous expression of tolerance and resistance traits during seedling development and overall seedling defences as compared with adult plants, in general, constitutes a significant research need that can greatly improve our understanding of overall investment in defences during plant ontogeny. - Using two seedling and two juvenile stages of the perennial herb Penstemon virgatus (Plantaginaceae) evaluations were made of (a) patterns of investment in constitutive chemical defences [i.e. iridoid glycosides (IGs)], and (b) simultaneous variation in the short-term ability of seedling and juvenile stages to induce resistance traits, measured as induced chemical defences, or tolerance traits, measured as compensatory re-growth following moderate levels of damage by a specialist insect herbivore. - Plants were highly defended during most of their transition from seedling to early juvenile stages, reaching a constant approx. 20 dry weight total IGs. Furthermore, following 30 above-ground tissue damage, seedlings and juvenile stages were equally able to induce resistance, by raising their IG concentration by approx. 8 , whereas compensatory re-growth was only achieved at young juvenile but not seedling stages. - "Two major trends emerged from this study: (1) in contrast to expected and previously observed trends, in this perennial plant species, seedlings seem to be one of the most well-defended stages as compared with adult ones; (2) high levels of constitutive defences did not limit the ability of young developmental stages to induce resistance following damage, although this response may come with a cost (i.e. decreased compensation) in young seedling stages. Hence, as has been previously demonstrated in few other systems, these results points towards an indirect evidence for a trade-off between tolerance and resistance traits at some, but not all, developmental stages; making them often difficult to detect."

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000322952500003 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volumen: 112
Número: 4
Editorial: OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Página de inicio: 661
Página final: 669
DOI:

10.1093/aob/mct011

Notas: ISI