Harrison Joshua G, Gompert Zachariah, Fordyce James A, Buerkle C Alex, Grinstead Rachel, Jahner Joshua P, Mikel Scott, Nice Christopher C, Santamaria Aldrin, Forister Matthew L
Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology, Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, 89557, United States of America.
Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, 89557, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Feb 2;11(2):e0147971. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147971. eCollection 2016.
From the perspective of an herbivorous insect, conspecific host plants are not identical, and intraspecific variation in host nutritional quality or defensive capacity might mediate spatially variable outcomes in plant-insect interactions. Here we explore this possibility in the context of an ongoing host breadth expansion of a native butterfly (the Melissa blue, Lycaeides melissa) onto an exotic host plant (alfalfa, Medicago sativa). We examine variation among seven alfalfa populations that differed in terms of colonization by L. melissa; specifically, we examined variation in phytochemistry, foliar protein, and plant population genetic structure, as well as responses of caterpillars and adult butterflies to foliage from the same populations. Regional patterns of alfalfa colonization by L. melissa were well predicted by phytochemical variation, and colonized patches of alfalfa showed a similar level of inter-individual phytochemical diversity. However, phytochemical variation was a poor predictor of larval performance, despite the fact that survival and weight gain differed dramatically among caterpillars reared on plants from different alfalfa populations. Moreover, we observed a mismatch between alfalfa supporting the best larval performance and alfalfa favored by ovipositing females. Thus, the axes of plant variation that mediate interactions with L. melissa depend upon herbivore life history stage, which raises important issues for our understanding of adaptation to novel resources by an organism with a complex life history.
从食草昆虫的角度来看,同种宿主植物并非完全相同,宿主营养质量或防御能力的种内变异可能会介导植物 - 昆虫相互作用中空间上可变的结果。在此,我们在一种本土蝴蝶(梅丽莎蓝蝶,Lycaeides melissa)正在将宿主范围扩展到一种外来宿主植物(紫花苜蓿,Medicago sativa)的背景下探讨这种可能性。我们研究了七个紫花苜蓿种群之间的变异,这些种群在梅丽莎蓝蝶的定殖方面存在差异;具体而言,我们研究了植物化学、叶片蛋白质和植物种群遗传结构的变异,以及毛虫和成年蝴蝶对来自相同种群叶片的反应。梅丽莎蓝蝶对紫花苜蓿的区域定殖模式能很好地通过植物化学变异预测,并且定殖的紫花苜蓿斑块显示出相似水平的个体间植物化学多样性。然而,尽管在不同紫花苜蓿种群的植物上饲养的毛虫之间存活率和体重增加差异巨大,但植物化学变异对幼虫表现的预测能力很差。此外,我们观察到支持最佳幼虫表现的紫花苜蓿与产卵雌蝶偏爱的紫花苜蓿之间存在不匹配。因此,介导与梅丽莎蓝蝶相互作用的植物变异轴取决于食草动物的生活史阶段,这为我们理解具有复杂生活史的生物体对新资源的适应提出了重要问题。