Cripps Michael G, Jackman Sarah D, Roquet Cristina, van Koten Chikako, Rostás Michael, Bourdôt Graeme W, Susanna Alfonso
AgResearch Ltd. Lincoln, New Zealand.
Laboratoire d'Écologie Alpine, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université Grenoble Alpes Grenoble, France.
Front Plant Sci. 2016 Aug 23;7:1261. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2016.01261. eCollection 2016.
The majority of herbivorous insects are specialized feeders restricted to a plant family, genus, or species. The evolution of specialized insect-plant interactions is generally considered to be a result of trade-offs in fitness between possible hosts. Through the course of natural selection, host plants that maximize insect fitness should result in optimal, specialized, insect-plant associations. However, the extent to which insects are tracking plant phylogeny or key plant traits that act as herbivore resistance or acceptance characters is uncertain. Thus, with regard to the evolution of host plant specialization, we tested if insect performance is explained by phylogenetic relatedness of potential host plants, or key plant traits that are not phylogenetically related. We tested the survival (naive first instar to adult) of the oligophagous leaf-feeding beetle, Cassida rubiginosa, on 16 selected representatives of the Cardueae tribe (thistles and knapweeds), including some of the worst weeds in temperate grasslands of the world in terms of the economic impacts caused by lost productivity. Leaf traits (specific leaf area, leaf pubescence, flavonoid concentration, carbon and nitrogen content) were measured as explanatory variables and tested in relation to survival of the beetle, and the phylogenetic signal of the traits were examined. The survival of C. rubiginosa decreased with increasing phylogenetic distance from the known primary host plant, C. arvense, suggesting that specialization is a conserved character, and that insect host range, to a large degree is constrained by evolutionary history. The only trait measured that clearly offered some explanatory value for the survival of C. rubiginosa was specific leaf area. This trait was not phylogenetically dependant, and when combined with phylogenetic distance from C. arvense gave the best model explaining C. rubiginosa survival. We conclude that the specialization of the beetle is explained by a combination of adaptation to an optimal host plant over evolutionary time, and key plant traits such as specific leaf area that can restrict or broaden host utilization within the Cardueae lineage. The phylogenetic pattern of C. rubiginosa fitness will aid in predicting the ability of this biocontrol agent to control multiple Cardueae weeds.
大多数食草昆虫都是专门的取食者,局限于某一植物科、属或种。专门的昆虫与植物相互作用的进化通常被认为是在可能的宿主之间权衡适应性的结果。在自然选择过程中,能使昆虫适应性最大化的宿主植物应会产生最优的、专门的昆虫与植物关联。然而,昆虫追踪植物系统发育或作为食草动物抗性或接受特征的关键植物性状的程度尚不确定。因此,关于宿主植物专一化的进化,我们测试了昆虫的表现是否由潜在宿主植物的系统发育相关性或非系统发育相关的关键植物性状来解释。我们测试了寡食性食叶甲虫卡西达锈色叶甲从初孵幼虫到成虫的存活情况,以16种菊科菜蓟族(蓟属植物和矢车菊属植物)的选定代表植物为食,其中包括世界温带草原上一些因生产力损失造成经济影响最严重的杂草。测量了叶片性状(比叶面积、叶毛、黄酮类化合物浓度、碳和氮含量)作为解释变量,并测试其与甲虫存活情况的关系,同时检查了这些性状的系统发育信号。卡西达锈色叶甲的存活率随着与已知主要宿主植物田蓟的系统发育距离增加而降低,这表明专一化是一个保守特征,并且昆虫的宿主范围在很大程度上受到进化历史的限制。所测量的唯一对卡西达锈色叶甲存活情况有明显解释价值的性状是比叶面积。该性状不依赖系统发育,并且与距田蓟的系统发育距离相结合时,给出了解释卡西达锈色叶甲存活情况的最佳模型。我们得出结论,甲虫的专一化是由在进化时间内对最优宿主植物的适应以及比叶面积等关键植物性状的组合来解释的,这些性状可以限制或扩大在菜蓟族谱系内的宿主利用。卡西达锈色叶甲适应性的系统发育模式将有助于预测这种生物防治剂控制多种菊科杂草的能力。