Lower Steven S, Kirshenbaum Sheril, Orians Colin M
Department of Biology, Tufts University, Medford, MA 02155, USA.
Oecologia. 2003 Aug;136(3):402-11. doi: 10.1007/s00442-003-1278-4. Epub 2003 May 20.
The distribution and abundance of herbivores on plants growing under different environmental conditions may depend upon preference and/or performance. Soil nutrients and water availability are key determinants of herbivore distribution, as both influence plant growth and tissue quality. However, the effects of water on plant quality may depend upon the availability of nutrients and vice versa. Surprisingly few studies have examined the interactions between the two. We investigated the effects of soil nutrient and water availability on (1) the growth and chemistry of the silky willow (Salix sericea Marshall), and (2) the preference and performance of the imported willow leaf beetle (Plagiodera versicolora Laichartig). We conducted two common garden experiments using a similar 2x2 fully factorial design with two levels of soil nutrients (low, high) and two levels of water availability (field capacity, flooded). In the first experiment (larval performance), larval development time and pupal weight were not influenced by nutrient or water availability to the plant. This occurred despite the fact that plants in the high nutrient treatments had higher protein concentration and lower foliar concentrations of the phenolic glycoside 2'-cinnamoylsalicortin. In the second experiment (adult preference), we caged four plants (one from each treatment) and released beetles into cages. We found that plant growth and leaf protein depended upon the interaction between nutrient and water availability. Plant growth was greatest in the high nutrient-field capacity treatment and leaf protein was greatest in the high nutrient-flooded treatment. In contrast, adults settled and oviposited preferentially on the high nutrient treatment under flooded conditions, but we found no evidence of interactions between nutrients and water on preference. Thus, at least under flooded conditions nutrients affect adult preference. We also found that foliar protein was correlated positively with adult oviposition preference and per capita egg production. Our results, then, suggest that soil nutrients can influence adult preference, and that adults choose high-quality hosts (high protein) that promote egg production.
在不同环境条件下生长的植物上,食草动物的分布和数量可能取决于偏好和/或表现。土壤养分和水分有效性是食草动物分布的关键决定因素,因为二者都会影响植物生长和组织质量。然而,水分对植物质量的影响可能取决于养分的有效性,反之亦然。令人惊讶的是,很少有研究考察二者之间的相互作用。我们研究了土壤养分和水分有效性对以下两方面的影响:(1)绢柳(Salix sericea Marshall)的生长和化学成分,以及(2)引进的柳树叶甲(Plagiodera versicolora Laichartig)的偏好和表现。我们进行了两个共同花园实验,采用类似的2×2完全析因设计,设置两个土壤养分水平(低、高)和两个水分有效性水平(田间持水量、水淹)。在第一个实验(幼虫表现)中,幼虫发育时间和蛹重不受植物所获养分或水分有效性的影响。尽管高养分处理的植物蛋白质浓度较高,酚糖苷2'-肉桂酰水杨苷的叶浓度较低,但仍出现了这种情况。在第二个实验(成虫偏好)中,我们将四株植物(每种处理各一株)装入笼子,并将叶甲放入笼中。我们发现,植物生长和叶片蛋白质含量取决于养分和水分有效性之间的相互作用。在高养分-田间持水量处理中植物生长最好,在高养分-水淹处理中叶片蛋白质含量最高。相比之下,成虫在水淹条件下优先在高养分处理的植株上定居和产卵,但我们没有发现养分和水分在偏好方面存在相互作用的证据。因此,至少在水淹条件下,养分影响成虫偏好。我们还发现,叶片蛋白质与成虫产卵偏好和人均产卵量呈正相关。那么,我们的结果表明,土壤养分可以影响成虫偏好,而且成虫会选择能促进产卵的高质量寄主(高蛋白)。