Departments of Entomology and Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States.
Departments of Entomology and Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States.
Curr Opin Insect Sci. 2016 Apr;14:25-31. doi: 10.1016/j.cois.2016.01.001. Epub 2016 Jan 23.
Variability in plant chemistry has long been believed to suppress populations of insect herbivores by constraining herbivore resource selection behavior in ways that make herbivores more vulnerable to predation. The focus on behavior, however, overlooks the pervasive physiological effects of plant variability on herbivores. Here we propose the plant variability-gut acclimation hypothesis, which posits that plant chemical variability constrains herbivore anti-predator defenses by frequently requiring herbivores to acclimate their guts to changing plant defenses and nutrients. Gut acclimation, including changes to morphology and detoxification enzymes, requires time and nutrients, and we argue these costs will constrain how and when herbivores can mount anti-predator defenses. A consequence of this hypothesis is stronger top-down control of herbivores in heterogeneous plant populations.
长期以来,人们一直认为植物化学物质的变异性通过限制食草动物对资源的选择行为,使食草动物更容易受到捕食者的攻击,从而抑制昆虫食草动物的种群数量。然而,这种关注行为的方法忽略了植物变异性对食草动物普遍存在的生理影响。在这里,我们提出了“植物变异性-肠道适应假说”,该假说认为,植物化学物质的变异性通过经常要求食草动物使肠道适应不断变化的植物防御和营养物质,从而限制了食草动物的抗捕食防御。肠道适应包括形态和解毒酶的变化,需要时间和营养物质,我们认为这些成本将限制食草动物何时以及如何能够建立抗捕食防御。这一假说的一个结果是,在异质植物种群中,食草动物受到更强的自上而下的控制。