Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México, Distrito Federal, México.
PLoS One. 2010 Mar 23;5(3):e9824. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009824.
Frequently, in dioecious plants, female plants allocate more resources to reproduction than male plants. Therefore it is expected that asymmetrical allocation to reproduction may lead to a reproduction-growth tradeoff, whereby female plants grow less than male plants, but invest more in defenses and thus experience lower herbivory than male plants.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We tested these expectations by comparing resource allocation to reproduction, growth and defense and its consequences on herbivory in three sympatric dioecious Chamaedorea palms (C. alternans, C. pinnatifrons and C. ernesti-augusti) using a pair-wise design (replicated male/female neighboring plants) in a Mexican tropical rain forest. Our findings support the predictions. Biomass allocation to reproduction in C. pinnatifrons was 3-times higher in female than male plants, consistent with what is known in C. alternans and C. ernesti-augusti. Growth (height and leaf production rate and biomass production) was higher in male plants of all three species. Female plants of the three species had traits that suggest greater investment in defense, as they had 4-16% tougher leaves, and 8-18% higher total phenolic compounds concentration. Accordingly, female plants sustained 53-78% lower standing herbivory and 49-87% lower herbivory rates than male plants.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results suggests that resource allocation to reproduction in the studied palms is more costly to female plants and this leads to predictable intersexual differences in growth, defense and herbivory. We conclude that resource allocation to reproduction in plants can have important consequences that influence their interaction with herbivores. Since herbivory is recognized as an important selective force in plants, these results are of significance to our understanding of plant defense evolution.
在雌雄异株植物中,雌性植物通常比雄性植物分配更多的资源用于繁殖。因此,预期不对称的繁殖分配可能导致繁殖-生长权衡,即雌性植物生长得比雄性植物少,但投入更多的防御,因此受到的草食比雄性植物低。
方法/主要发现:我们通过比较三个同域分布的雌雄异株 Chamaedorea 棕榈(C. alternans、C. pinnatifrons 和 C. ernesti-augusti)的繁殖、生长和防御资源分配及其对草食的影响,使用墨西哥热带雨林中的配对设计(雄性/雌性相邻植物的重复)来检验这些预期。我们的研究结果支持这些预测。C. pinnatifrons 中雌性植物的繁殖生物量分配比雄性植物高 3 倍,这与 C. alternans 和 C. ernesti-augusti 中的情况一致。所有三个物种的雄性植物的生长(高度、叶片产生率和生物量产生)都较高。三个物种的雌性植物具有更强的防御投资特征,因为它们的叶片坚韧度提高了 4-16%,总酚化合物浓度提高了 8-18%。因此,与雄性植物相比,雌性植物的固定草食量和草食率分别降低了 53-78%和 49-87%。
结论/意义:我们的研究结果表明,研究中的棕榈植物繁殖资源的分配对雌性植物的成本更高,这导致了可预测的雌雄间在生长、防御和草食方面的差异。我们得出结论,植物繁殖资源的分配对植物的相互作用与草食者有重要影响。由于草食作用被认为是植物的一个重要选择压力,这些结果对我们理解植物防御进化具有重要意义。