University of Hohenheim, Hans-Ruthenberg Institute, Agroecology Unit, Stuttgart, Germany.
University of Helsinki, Ecosystems and Environment Research Programme, Environmental Ecology Unit, Lahti, Finland.
Pest Manag Sci. 2021 Oct;77(10):4770-4784. doi: 10.1002/ps.6522. Epub 2021 Jul 5.
Low toxin doses that do not affect mean responses in plant populations can still change the growth of subpopulations. Studies covering vegetative stages ascribed fast-growing plants higher thresholds for growth stimulation and inhibition, compared with the rest of the population. We hypothesized that such selective effects also play a role after reproduction; that is, the offspring of glyphosate-treated tolerant, fast-growing phenotypes is more tolerant than the offspring of untreated plants. An experimental, high-density barley population was exposed to a range of glyphosate concentrations in the greenhouse, and reproduction and final growth were analyzed for selective effects. Therefore, F0, F1 treated and F1 non-treated offspring were re-exposed to glyphosate.
Low doses of glyphosate inhibited the growth and reproduction of slow-growing plants at concentrations that did not change the population mean. Concentrations that inhibited average-sized plants hormetically increased the biomass and seed yield of fast-growing plants. Compared with F0 and F1 non-treated offspring, F1-treated offspring from hormetically stimulated fast-growing plants were more glyphosate tolerant. Hence, a pesticide can shape the reproductive pattern of a plant population and alter offspring tolerance at concentrations that have no effect on average yield.
Toxin levels that do not change the population mean still alter the reproductive output of individuals. Sensitive phenotypes suffer, whereas the reproduction of tolerant phenotypes is boosted compared with toxin-free conditions. Because glyphosate is one of the leading herbicides in the world, tolerant phenotypes may benefit from current agricultural practices. If these results apply to other toxicants, low toxin doses may increase the fitness of tolerant phenotypes in a way not previously anticipated. © 2021 The Authors. Pest Management Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Chemical Industry.
低毒素剂量不会影响植物种群的平均反应,但仍能改变亚种群的生长。与种群其余部分相比,涵盖营养阶段的研究赋予了快速生长植物更高的生长刺激和抑制阈值。我们假设这种选择性效应在繁殖后也会起作用;也就是说,经草甘膦处理的耐受、快速生长表型的后代比未经处理的植物的后代更耐受。在温室中,用一系列草甘膦浓度对一个实验性高密度大麦种群进行了暴露,并对选择性效应进行了繁殖和最终生长分析。因此,F0、F1 处理和 F1 未处理的后代再次暴露于草甘膦中。
低剂量的草甘膦抑制了生长和繁殖缓慢的植物的生长和繁殖,而不会改变种群平均值。抑制平均大小植物的浓度以一种植物激素的方式增加了快速生长植物的生物量和种子产量。与 F0 和 F1 未处理的后代相比,来自激素刺激的快速生长植物的 F1 处理后代对草甘膦更耐受。因此,一种杀虫剂可以塑造植物种群的繁殖模式,并在对平均产量没有影响的浓度下改变后代的耐受性。
不改变种群平均值的毒素水平仍然改变个体的生殖输出。敏感表型受到影响,而耐受表型的繁殖与无毒素条件相比得到了促进。由于草甘膦是世界上领先的除草剂之一,耐受表型可能会受益于当前的农业实践。如果这些结果适用于其他有毒物质,那么低剂量的毒素可能会以以前未预料到的方式增加耐受表型的适应性。©2021 作者。害虫管理科学由 John Wiley & Sons Ltd 代表化学工业协会出版。