Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA; Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Curr Biol. 2023 Jun 5;33(11):R519-R529. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.04.025.
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in general and herbivory-induced plant volatiles (HIPVs) in particular are increasingly understood as major mediators of information transfer between plant tissues. Recent findings have moved the field of plant communication closer to a detailed understanding of how plants emit and perceive VOCs and seem to converge on a model that juxtaposes perception and emission mechanisms. These new mechanistic insights help to explain how plants can integrate different types of information and how environmental noise can affect the transmission of information. At the same time, ever-new functions of VOC-mediated plant-plant interactions are being revealed. Chemical information transfer between plants is now known to fundamentally affect plant organismal interactions and, additionally, population, community, and ecosystem dynamics. One of the most exciting new developments places plant-plant interactions along a behavioral continuum with an eavesdropping strategy at one end and mutually beneficial information-sharing among plants within a population at the other. Most importantly and based on recent findings as well as theoretical models, plant populations can be predicted to evolve different communication strategies depending on their interaction environment. We use recent studies from ecological model systems to illustrate this context dependency of plant communication. Moreover, we review recent key findings about the mechanisms and functions of HIPV-mediated information transfer and suggest conceptual links, such as to information theory and behavioral game theory, as valuable tools for a deeper understanding of how plant-plant communication affects ecological and evolutionary dynamics.
挥发性有机化合物(VOCs)和特别是食草诱导的植物挥发物(HIPVs)越来越被认为是植物组织之间信息传递的主要介质。最近的发现使植物通讯领域更接近于详细了解植物如何释放和感知 VOC,并似乎趋同于一种并列感知和排放机制的模型。这些新的机制见解有助于解释植物如何整合不同类型的信息,以及环境噪声如何影响信息的传递。同时,越来越多的研究揭示了 VOC 介导的植物-植物相互作用的新功能。植物间的化学信息传递现在被认为从根本上影响植物个体间的相互作用,此外还影响种群、群落和生态系统的动态。最令人兴奋的新发展之一是将植物-植物相互作用沿着行为连续体放置,一端是偷听策略,另一端是种群内植物之间互惠互利的信息共享。最重要的是,根据最近的发现以及理论模型,可以预测植物种群根据其相互作用环境进化出不同的通信策略。我们使用来自生态模型系统的最新研究来说明植物通信的这种上下文依赖性。此外,我们回顾了关于 HIPV 介导的信息传递的机制和功能的最新关键发现,并提出了概念联系,例如信息论和行为博弈论,作为更深入了解植物-植物通信如何影响生态和进化动态的有价值的工具。