Davidowitz Goggy, Bronstein Judith L, Tigreros Natasha
Department of Entomology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Front Plant Sci. 2022 Apr 25;13:843506. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2022.843506. eCollection 2022.
Plant-herbivore and plant-pollinator interactions are both well-studied, but largely independent of each other. It has become increasingly recognized, however, that pollination and herbivory interact extensively in nature, with consequences for plant fitness. Here, we explore the idea that trade-offs in investment in insect flight and reproduction may be a mechanistic link between pollination and herbivory. We first provide a general background on trade-offs between flight and fecundity in insects. We then focus on Lepidoptera; larvae are generally herbivores while most adults are pollinators, making them ideal to study these links. Increased allocation of resources to flight, we argue, potentially increases a Lepidopteran insect pollinator's efficiency, resulting in higher plant fitness. In contrast, allocation of resources to reproduction in the same insect species reduces plant fitness, because it leads to an increase in herbivore population size. We examine the sequence of resource pools available to herbivorous Lepidopteran larvae (maternally provided nutrients to the eggs, as well as leaf tissue), and to adults (nectar and nuptial gifts provided by the males to the females), which potentially are pollinators. Last, we discuss how subsequent acquisition and allocation of resources from these pools may alter flight-fecundity trade-offs, with concomitant effects both on pollinator performance and the performance of larval herbivores in the next generation. Allocation decisions at different times during ontogeny translate into costs of herbivory and/or benefits of pollination for plants, mechanistically linking herbivory and pollination.
植物与食草动物以及植物与传粉者之间的相互作用都得到了充分研究,但在很大程度上彼此独立。然而,人们越来越认识到,授粉和食草作用在自然界中广泛相互作用,对植物适合度产生影响。在这里,我们探讨这样一种观点,即昆虫飞行和繁殖投资之间的权衡可能是授粉和食草作用之间的一个机制性联系。我们首先提供昆虫飞行和繁殖力之间权衡的一般背景。然后我们聚焦于鳞翅目;其幼虫通常是食草动物,而大多数成虫是传粉者,这使它们成为研究这些联系的理想对象。我们认为,增加对飞行的资源分配可能会提高鳞翅目昆虫传粉者的效率,从而提高植物适合度。相反,同一昆虫物种将资源分配给繁殖会降低植物适合度,因为这会导致食草动物种群规模增加。我们研究了食草性鳞翅目幼虫(母体为卵提供的营养物质以及叶片组织)和成体(雄性向雌性提供的花蜜和婚飞礼物)可利用的资源库序列,而成体有可能是传粉者。最后,我们讨论从这些资源库中随后获取和分配资源如何可能改变飞行 - 繁殖力权衡,同时对传粉者表现以及下一代幼虫食草动物的表现产生影响。个体发育过程中不同时间的分配决策转化为植物的食草成本和/或授粉收益,从机制上把食草作用和授粉联系起来。