Department of Botany, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Ann Bot. 2013 Aug;112(4):643-50. doi: 10.1093/aob/mct139.
Herbivores have the power to shape plant evolutionary trajectories, influence the structure and function of vegetation, devastate entire crops, or halt the spread of invasive weeds, and as a consequence, research into plant-herbivore interactions is pivotal to our understanding of plant ecology and evolution. However, the causes and consequences of seedling herbivory have received remarkably little attention, despite the fact that plants tend to be most susceptible to herbivory during establishment, and this damage can alter community composition and structure.
In this Viewpoint article we review why herbivory during early plant ontogeny is important and in so doing introduce an Annals of Botany Special Issue that draws together the latest work on the topic. In a synthesis of the existing literature and a collection of new studies, we examine several linked issues. These include the development and expression of seedling defences and patterns of selection by herbivores, and how seedling selection affects plant establishment and community structure. We then examine how disruption of the seedling-herbivore interaction might affect normal patterns of plant community establishment and discuss how an understanding of patterns of seedling herbivory can aid our attempts to restore semi-natural vegetation. We finish by outlining a number of areas where more research is required. These include a need for a deeper consideration of how endogenous and exogenous factors determine investment in seedling defence, particularly for the very youngest plants, and a better understanding of the phylogenetic and biogeographical patterns of seedling defence. There is also much still be to be done on the mechanisms of seedling selection by herbivores, particularly with respect to the possible involvement of volatile cues. These inter-related issues together inform our understanding of how seedling herbivory affects plant regeneration at a time when anthropogenic change is likely to disrupt this long-established, but all-too-often ignored interaction.
食草动物具有塑造植物进化轨迹、影响植被结构和功能、破坏整个作物或阻止入侵杂草蔓延的能力,因此,研究植物与食草动物的相互作用对我们理解植物生态学和进化至关重要。然而,尽管植物在建立阶段最容易受到食草动物的侵害,而且这种侵害会改变群落的组成和结构,但幼苗食草动物的原因和后果却很少受到关注。
在这篇观点文章中,我们回顾了为什么在植物个体发育早期发生的食草作用很重要,并借此介绍了一个《植物学年鉴》特刊,该特刊汇集了关于这一主题的最新研究成果。我们综合了现有文献和一系列新研究,研究了几个相关问题。这些问题包括幼苗防御的发育和表达以及食草动物的选择模式,以及幼苗选择如何影响植物的建立和群落结构。然后,我们研究了破坏幼苗-食草动物相互作用可能如何影响正常的植物群落建立模式,并讨论了对幼苗食草作用模式的理解如何有助于我们尝试恢复半自然植被。最后,我们概述了需要进一步研究的几个领域。其中包括需要更深入地考虑内源性和外源性因素如何决定幼苗防御的投资,特别是对于非常年幼的植物,以及更好地理解幼苗防御的系统发育和生物地理模式。对于食草动物对幼苗的选择机制,还有很多工作要做,特别是关于挥发性线索可能的参与。这些相互关联的问题共同告知我们,在人为变化可能破坏这种长期存在但往往被忽视的相互作用的时候,幼苗食草动物如何影响植物再生。