Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
Biology Department, Hamilton College, Clinton, NY, 13323, USA.
Oecologia. 2022 Jun;199(2):397-405. doi: 10.1007/s00442-022-05187-8. Epub 2022 Jun 1.
Plant induced defenses may benefit plants by increasing cannibalism among insect herbivores. However, the general efficacy of plant defenses that promote cannibalism remains unclear. Using a generalist Lepidopteran herbivore (Helicoverpa zea), we examined whether plant induced defenses in Solanum lycopersicum increased cannibalism among H. zea and whether defense-mediated cannibalism benefits both the plant and the cannibal. In a separate experiment, we also examined whether defense-mediated cannibalism has effects on H. zea herbivory that are comparable to the effects of pathogenic virus of H. zea (HzSNPV) and whether defense-mediated cannibalism modified pathogen efficacy. We found that both plant defenses and cannibalism decreased herbivory: H. zea consumed less plant material if plants were induced, if dead conspecifics were provided, or both. Cannibalism increased cannibal growth rate: cannibals effectively overcome the costs of plant defenses by eating conspecifics. Inoculating half of H. zea with virus strongly reduced caterpillar survival. Cannibalism occurred sooner among virus-inoculated groups of H. zea, and all caterpillars in virus-inoculated treatments died before the end of the 7-day experiment. Although the rise in mortality caused by HzSNPV occurred more rapidly than the rise in mortality due to defense-mediated cannibalism, overall H. zea mortality at the end of the experiment was equal among virus-inoculated and induced-defense groups. Defense-mediated cannibalism and viral inoculation equally reduced herbivory on S. lycopersicum. Our results provide evidence that defense-mediated increases in cannibalism can be as effective as other forms of classic herbivore population regulation, and that both viral pathogens and defense-induced cannibalism can have significant benefits for plants.
植物诱导防御可能通过增加昆虫食草动物之间的同类相食来使植物受益。然而,促进同类相食的植物防御的一般效果仍不清楚。我们使用一种普遍的鳞翅目食草动物(Helicoverpa zea),研究了番茄(Solanum lycopersicum)中的植物诱导防御是否会增加 H. zea 之间的同类相食,以及防御介导的同类相食是否对植物和食草动物都有益。在另一个实验中,我们还研究了防御介导的同类相食是否对 H. zea 的取食有类似于 H. zea 的致病性病毒(HzSNPV)的影响,以及防御介导的同类相食是否改变了病原体的功效。我们发现,植物防御和同类相食都会降低取食:如果植物被诱导,提供死亡的同种个体,或者两者都有,H. zea 会消耗更少的植物材料。同类相食会增加食草动物的生长速度:食草动物通过吃同种个体有效地克服了植物防御的成本。将一半的 H. zea 接种病毒会强烈降低毛毛虫的存活率。在接种病毒的 H. zea 组中,同类相食发生得更早,并且所有接种病毒的毛毛虫在 7 天实验结束前都死亡。虽然 HzSNPV 引起的死亡率上升比防御介导的同类相食引起的死亡率上升更快,但在实验结束时,接种病毒和诱导防御的 H. zea 死亡率相等。防御介导的同类相食和病毒接种同样减少了对番茄的取食。我们的结果提供了证据,表明防御介导的同类相食的增加可以与其他形式的经典食草动物种群调节一样有效,并且病毒病原体和防御诱导的同类相食都可以对植物有显著的益处。