Department of Terrestrial Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Laboratory of Entomology, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
J Anim Ecol. 2018 Jul;87(4):1046-1057. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12835. Epub 2018 May 14.
Wind is an important abiotic factor that influences an array of biological processes, but it is rarely considered in studies on plant-herbivore interactions. Here, we tested whether wind exposure could directly or indirectly affect the performance of two insect herbivores, Plutella xylostella and Pieris brassicae, feeding on Brassica nigra plants. In a greenhouse study using a factorial design, B. nigra plants were exposed to different wind regimes generated by fans before and after caterpillars were introduced on plants in an attempt to separate the effects of direct and indirect wind exposure on herbivores. Wind exposure delayed flowering, decreased plant height and increased leaf concentrations of amino acids and glucosinolates. Plant-mediated effects of wind on herbivores, that is effects of exposure of plants to wind prior to herbivore feeding, were generally small. However, development time of both herbivores was extended and adult body mass of P. xylostella was reduced when they were directly exposed to wind. By contrast, wind-exposed adult P. brassicae butterflies were significantly larger, revealing a trade-off between development time and adult size. Based on these results, we conducted a behavioural experiment to study preference by an avian predator, the great tit (Parus major) for last instar P. brassicae caterpillars on plants that were exposed to either control (no wind) or wind (fan-exposed) treatments. Tits captured significantly more caterpillars on still than on wind-exposed plants. Our results suggest that P. brassicae caterpillars are able to perceive the abiotic environment and to trade off the costs of extended development time against the benefits of increased size depending on the perceived risk of predation mediated by wind exposure. Such adaptive phenotypic plasticity in insects has not yet been described in response to wind exposure.
风是影响一系列生物过程的重要非生物因素,但在植物-草食动物相互作用的研究中,它很少被考虑。在这里,我们测试了风暴露是否可以直接或间接影响两种昆虫食草动物,小菜蛾和菜粉蝶,在食用黑芥植物时的表现。在一个使用因子设计的温室研究中,黑芥植物在幼虫被引入植物之前和之后暴露在风扇产生的不同风况下,试图将直接和间接风暴露对食草动物的影响分开。风暴露会延迟开花,降低植物高度,并增加叶片中氨基酸和硫代葡萄糖苷的浓度。植物介导的风对食草动物的影响,即在食草动物取食之前植物暴露于风中的影响,通常很小。然而,当直接暴露于风中时,两种食草动物的发育时间延长,菜粉蝶的成虫体重减轻。相比之下,暴露于风中的成年菜粉蝶体型明显更大,这揭示了发育时间和成虫体型之间的权衡。基于这些结果,我们进行了一项行为实验,研究了鸟类捕食者大山雀对暴露于控制(无风)或风(风扇暴露)处理的黑芥植物上的最后龄期菜粉蝶幼虫的偏好。山雀在静止的植物上捕获的幼虫明显多于在有风暴露的植物上。我们的结果表明,菜粉蝶幼虫能够感知到生物环境,并根据感知到的风暴露介导的捕食风险,权衡延长发育时间的成本与体型增加的好处。昆虫对风暴露的这种适应性表型可塑性尚未被描述过。