Gange A C, West H M
Department of Biology, Royal Holloway, Egham Hill, Egham, Surrey TW20 OEX.
Division of Biological Sciences, Lancaster University, Lancaster LAI 4YQ.
New Phytol. 1994 Sep;128(1):79-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.1994.tb03989.x.
A field experiment was conducted to investigate whether infection by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi has any effect on herbivory by foliar-feeding insects. Plants of PI ant ago laureolata L. were grown in a randomized block design and natural levels of mycorrhizal infection reduced by the application of the granular fungicide iprodione. Plant growth responses were examined and herbivore bioassays performed by rearing both a chewing and sucking insect on the leaves of mycorrhizal and fungicide-treated plants. Fungicide application successfully reduced mycorrhizal infection, and this led to reductions in foliar biomass, caused by lower leaf number. However, fungicide-treated plants suffered consistently higher levels of damage by centralist chewing and leaf-mining insects, which colonized the plants. The chewing insect bioassay confirmed the field results, in that larvae of Arttia caja L. (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae) consumed more leaf material from plants in which infection was reduced. There was no evidence that AM fungi altered food quality for the chewing insect. Instead, infection caused an increase in the carbon/nutrient balance, which in turn led to increased levels of the carbon-based feeding deterrents, aucubin and catalpol, The sucking insect, Mvzus perskae (Sulzer) reacted in an opposite fashion to the ehewtr. with performance being greater on mycorrhizal plants. Again, there was no evidence that an alteration in food Quality was the cause, and in this case infection may result in changes in leaf morphology which benefit the insect. We suggest that under conditions of high light and low nutrient availability. AM infection can alter the carbon/nutrient balance of plants, leading to an increased allocation to carbon-based defences. This can have important consequences for insect herbivore performance and the patterns of herbivory in field situations.
进行了一项田间试验,以研究丛枝菌根(AM)真菌感染是否对食叶昆虫的取食有任何影响。将车前草(Plantago lanceolata L.)植株按随机区组设计种植,并通过施用颗粒状杀菌剂异菌脲来降低菌根感染的自然水平。检测了植株的生长反应,并通过在菌根植株和经杀菌剂处理的植株叶片上饲养咀嚼式和刺吸式昆虫进行了食草动物生物测定。施用杀菌剂成功降低了菌根感染,这导致叶生物量减少,原因是叶片数量减少。然而,经杀菌剂处理的植株遭受集中取食的咀嚼式昆虫和潜叶昆虫的损害程度始终较高,这些昆虫在植株上定殖。咀嚼式昆虫生物测定证实了田间试验结果,即榆绿天蛾(Arctia caja L.,鳞翅目:灯蛾科)的幼虫从感染减少的植株上取食的叶片材料更多。没有证据表明AM真菌改变了咀嚼式昆虫的食物质量。相反,感染导致碳/养分平衡增加,这反过来又导致基于碳的取食抑制剂桃叶珊瑚苷和梓醇的含量增加。刺吸式昆虫桃蚜(Myzus persicae (Sulzer))的反应与咀嚼式昆虫相反,在菌根植株上的表现更好。同样,没有证据表明食物质量的改变是原因,在这种情况下,感染可能导致叶片形态发生变化,从而对昆虫有利。我们认为,在高光和低养分有效性条件下,AM感染可改变植物的碳/养分平衡,导致对基于碳的防御分配增加。这可能对昆虫食草动物的表现以及田间情况下的取食模式产生重要影响。