Department of Entomology, Rutgers University, Chatsworth, NJ, USA.
Plant Signal Behav. 2010 Jan;5(1):58-60. doi: 10.4161/psb.5.1.10160.
A diverse, often species-specific, array of herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) are commonly emitted from plants after herbivore attack. Although research in the last 3 decades indicates a multi-functional role of these HIPVs, the evolutionary rationale underpinning HIPV emissions remains an open question. Many studies have documented that HIPVs can attract natural enemies, and some studies indicate that neighboring plants may eavesdrop their undamaged neighbors and induce or prime their own defenses prior to herbivore attack. Both of these ecological roles for HIPVs are risky strategies for the emitting plant. In a recent paper, we reported that most branches within a blueberry bush share limited vascular connectivity, which restricts the systemic movement of internal signals. Blueberry branches circumvent this limitation by responding to HIPVs emitted from neighboring branches of the same plant: exposure to HIPVs increases levels of defensive signaling hormones, changes their defensive status, and makes undamaged branches more resistant to herbivores. Similar findings have been reported recently for sagebrush, poplar and lima beans, where intra-plant communication played a role in activating or priming defenses against herbivores. Thus, there is increasing evidence that intra-plant communication occurs in a wide range of taxonomically unrelated plant species. While the degree to which this phenomenon increases a plant's fitness remains to be determined in most cases, we here argue that within-plant signaling provides more adaptive benefit for HIPV emissions than does between-plant signaling or attraction of predators. That is, the emission of HIPVs might have evolved primarily to protect undamaged parts of the plant against potential enemies, and neighboring plants and predators of herbivores later co-opted such HIPV signals for their own benefit.
植物在受到食草动物攻击后,会释放出多种多样的、通常具有物种特异性的挥发物(HIPVs)。尽管在过去的 30 年中,研究表明这些 HIPVs 具有多种功能,但 HIPV 排放的进化原理仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。许多研究记录了 HIPVs 可以吸引天敌,一些研究表明,邻近的植物可能会偷听它们未受损的邻居的 HIPVs,并在受到食草动物攻击之前诱导或增强自身的防御能力。HIPVs 的这两种生态作用对释放植物来说都是有风险的策略。在最近的一篇论文中,我们报告说,蓝莓灌木丛中的大多数枝条都共享有限的血管连通性,这限制了内部信号的系统运动。蓝莓枝条通过对来自同一植物的相邻枝条释放的 HIPVs 做出反应来规避这种限制:暴露于 HIPVs 会增加防御性信号激素的水平,改变它们的防御状态,并使未受损的枝条对食草动物更具抵抗力。最近在 sagebrush、杨树和利马豆中也有类似的发现,其中植物内通讯在激活或增强对食草动物的防御中发挥了作用。因此,越来越多的证据表明,植物内通讯发生在广泛的分类上无关的植物物种中。虽然在大多数情况下,这种现象在多大程度上增加了植物的适应性还有待确定,但我们认为,与植物间的信号传递或吸引捕食者相比,植物内信号传递为 HIPV 排放提供了更多的适应性益处。也就是说,HIPVs 的排放可能主要是为了保护植物未受损的部分免受潜在敌人的侵害,而邻近的植物和食草动物的捕食者后来则为了自己的利益而利用了这些 HIPV 信号。