Back to Search Start Over

Aphids Pick Their Poison: Selective Sequestration of Plant Chemicals Affects Host Plant Use in a Specialist Herbivore

Authors :
Nicholas Smirnoff
Nicole A. Goodey
Dave J. Hodgson
Hannah Florance
Source :
Journal of Chemical Ecology. 41:956-964
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

In some plant-insect interactions, specialist herbivores exploit the chemical defenses of their food plant to their own advantage. Brassica plants produce glucosinolates that are broken down into defensive toxins when tissue is damaged, but the specialist aphid, Brevicoryne brassicae, uses these chemicals against its own natural enemies by becoming a "walking mustard-oil bomb". Analysis of glucosinolate concentrations in plant tissue and associated aphid colonies reveals that not only do aphids sequester glucosinolates, but they do so selectively. Aphids specifically accumulate sinigrin to high concentrations while preferentially excreting a structurally similar glucosinolate, progoitrin. Surveys of aphid infestation in wild populations of Brassica oleracea show that this pattern of sequestration and excretion maps onto host plant use. The probability of aphid infestation decreases with increasing concentrations of progoitrin in plants. Brassica brassicae, therefore, appear to select among food plants according to plant secondary metabolite profiles, and selectively store only some compounds that are used against their own enemies. The results demonstrate chemical and behavioral mechanisms that help to explain evidence of geographic patterns and evolutionary dynamics in Brassica-aphid interactions.

Details

ISSN :
15731561 and 00980331
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Chemical Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....92041db55d780b0bbac8a9f858c55dd1