Department of Systematic Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland.
CREAF, Cerdanyola del Valles, Catalonia, Spain.
Ann Bot. 2019 Mar 14;123(4):707-714. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcy203.
The ability of plants to allocate energy to resistance against herbivores changes with abiotic conditions and thus may vary along geographical clines, with important consequences for plant communities. Seed size is a plant trait potentially influencing plant tolerance to endoparasites, and seed size often varies across latitude. Consequently, plant tolerance to endoparasites may change across geographical clines.
The interaction between Quercus ilex (holm oak) and seed-predating Curculio spp. (weevils) was explored along most of the latitudinal range of Q. ilex. This included quantification of variation in seed size, survival likelihood of infested seeds, multi-infestation of acorns and community composition of Curculio weevils in acorns.
Larger seeds had a higher probability of surviving weevil attack (i.e. embryo not predated). Southern populations of oak produced on average four times larger seeds than those of northern populations. Consequently, the probability of survival of infested acorns decreased with latitude. The community composition of Curculio varied, with large weevils (C. elephas) dominating in southern populations and small weevils (C. glandium) dominating in northern populations. However, damage tolerance was robust against this turnover in predator functional traits. Furthermore, we did not detect any change in multi-infestation of acorns along the geographical gradient.
Quercus ilex tolerance to seed predation by Curculio weevils increases toward the southern end of its distribution. Generally, studies on geographical variation in plant defence against enemies largely ignore seed attributes or they focus on seed physical barriers. Thus, this research suggests another dimension in which geographical trends in plant defences should be considered, i.e. geographical variation in tolerance to seed predators mediated by seed size.
植物分配能量以抵御草食动物的能力会随非生物条件而变化,因此可能会沿地理梯度而变化,这对植物群落有重要影响。种子大小是一个潜在影响植物对内寄生者容忍度的植物特征,而种子大小通常会随纬度而变化。因此,植物对内寄生者的容忍度可能会随地理梯度而变化。
研究人员在 Holm 橡树(Quercus ilex)的大部分纬度范围内探索了 Holm 橡树与种子捕食者(Curculio spp.,象鼻虫)之间的相互作用。这包括量化种子大小的变化、受侵染种子的存活可能性、橡子的多次侵染以及橡子中象鼻虫的群落组成。
较大的种子有更高的生存几率免受象鼻虫的攻击(即胚不受捕食)。南部种群的橡树产生的种子平均比北部种群的种子大四倍。因此,受侵染橡子的存活率随纬度降低而降低。象鼻虫的群落组成也发生了变化,大型象鼻虫(C. elephas)在南部种群中占主导地位,而小型象鼻虫(C. glandium)在北部种群中占主导地位。然而,损害容忍度对捕食者功能特征的这种变化具有稳健性。此外,我们没有在地理梯度上检测到橡子多次侵染的任何变化。
Holm 橡树对 Curculio 象鼻虫种子捕食的容忍度在其分布范围的南端增加。一般来说,关于植物抵御敌人的地理变异的研究在很大程度上忽略了种子属性,或者它们专注于种子的物理障碍。因此,这项研究表明了植物防御的另一个维度,即种子大小介导的对种子捕食者的容忍度的地理变化。