Graham Jessica L, Charlier Thierry D, Bonadonna Francesco, Caro Samuel P
CEFE, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD, Montpellier, France.
Univ Rennes, Inserm, EHESP, Irset (Institut de Recherche en Santé, Environnement et Travail), UMR_S 1085, F-35000 Rennes, France.
Horm Behav. 2021 Nov;136:105045. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2021.105045. Epub 2021 Sep 16.
In response to damage by insects, plants release herbivore-induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) into the air. Insectivorous birds exploit these cues and, consequently, reduce the damages inflicted to the plants. However, little is known about whether they solely use HIPVs as foraging cues, or if they also use them to modulate traits linked to reproduction. As caterpillars are the primary food source required for insectivorous birds to raise offspring, their ability to locate and predict future peaks in caterpillar biomass using olfaction is likely to be advantageous. Therefore, we tested whether an insectivorous songbird that naturally inhabits oak dominated forests can be trained to detect early spring infestation by hatchling caterpillars, at a time when oaks begin bursting, and birds prepare to breed. Tree buds were either infested with caterpillars or left as a control and visually obscured in a Y-Maze choice test. Additionally, we measured testosterone and 17β-estradiol as they influence olfactory perception in mammals and are linked to reproduction in vertebrates. After being trained to associate the presence of HIPVs with that of food, blue tits spent more time with, were more active around, and more frequently chose to first visit the infested trees, showing that blue tits can smell caterpillar activity. Males with higher testosterone spent more time around infested trees, suggesting that foraging behavior during the pre-breeding season is linked with a major reproductive signal. There was no relationship between foraging and estradiol in females. These results are an important foundation for further investigation of the role of hormones in avian olfaction and how smell may be useful for making breeding decisions that could improve reproductive success.
为应对昆虫造成的损害,植物会向空气中释放食草动物诱导的植物挥发物(HIPVs)。食虫鸟类利用这些线索,从而减少对植物造成的损害。然而,对于它们是否仅将HIPVs用作觅食线索,或者它们是否也利用这些线索来调节与繁殖相关的性状,我们知之甚少。由于毛虫是食虫鸟类养育后代所需的主要食物来源,它们利用嗅觉定位和预测毛虫生物量未来峰值的能力可能具有优势。因此,我们测试了一种自然栖息在以橡树为主的森林中的食虫鸣禽是否能够被训练来检测早春毛虫幼虫的侵扰,此时橡树开始发芽,鸟类也准备繁殖。在Y型迷宫选择试验中,将树芽要么用毛虫侵染,要么作为对照不做处理,并进行视觉遮挡。此外,我们测量了睾酮和17β-雌二醇,因为它们会影响哺乳动物的嗅觉感知,并且与脊椎动物的繁殖有关。在经过训练将HIPVs的存在与食物联系起来后,青山雀在侵染的树木周围停留的时间更长、活动更频繁,并且更频繁地选择首先访问侵染的树木,这表明青山雀能够闻到毛虫的活动。睾酮水平较高的雄性在侵染的树木周围停留的时间更长,这表明繁殖前季节的觅食行为与一个主要的生殖信号有关。雌性的觅食行为与雌二醇之间没有关系。这些结果是进一步研究激素在鸟类嗅觉中的作用以及嗅觉如何有助于做出可能提高繁殖成功率的繁殖决策的重要基础。