Bustos-Segura Carlos, Godschalx Adrienne L, Malacari Lucas, Deiss Fanny, Rasmann Sergio, Ballhorn Daniel J, Benrey Betty
Laboratory of Evolutionary Entomology, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
Sorbonne Université, Institut National de Recherche pour L'Agriculture, L'Alimentation et L'Environnement, CNRS, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Université Paris-Est-Créteil-Val-de-Marne, Université Paris Cité, Institut D'Ecologie et des Sciences de L'Environnement de Paris, Versailles, 78026, France.
Heliyon. 2024 Mar 13;10(6):e27815. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27815. eCollection 2024 Mar 30.
Microorganisms associated with plant roots significantly impact the quality and quantity of plant defences. However, the bottom-up effects of soil microbes on the aboveground multitrophic interactions remain largely under studied. To address this gap, we investigated the chemically-mediated effects of nitrogen-fixing rhizobia on legume-herbivore-parasitoid multitrophic interactions. To address this, we initially examined the cascading effects of the rhizobia bean association on herbivore caterpillars, their parasitoids, and subsequently investigated how rhizobia influence on plant volatiles and extrafloral nectar. Our goal was to understand how these plant-mediated effects can affect parasitoids. Lima bean plants () inoculated with rhizobia exhibited better growth, and the number of root nodules positively correlated with defensive cyanogenic compounds. Despite increase of these chemical defences, caterpillars preferred to feed and grew faster on rhizobia-inoculated plants. Moreover, the emission of plant volatiles after leaf damage showed distinct patterns between inoculation treatments, with inoculated plants producing more sesquiterpenes and benzyl nitrile than non-inoculated plants. Despite these differences, parasitoid wasps were similarly attracted to rhizobia- or no rhizobia-treated plants. Yet, the oviposition and offspring development of was better on caterpillars fed with rhizobia-inoculated plants. We additionally show that rhizobia-inoculated common bean plants () produced more extrafloral nectar, with higher hydrocarbon concentration, than non-inoculated plants. Consequently, parasitoids performed better when fed with extrafloral nectar from rhizobia-inoculated plants. While the overall effects of bean-rhizobia symbiosis on caterpillars were positive, rhizobia also indirectly benefited parasitoids through the caterpillar host, and directly through the improved production of high quality extrafloral nectar. This study underscores the importance of exploring diverse facets and chemical mechanisms that influence the dynamics between herbivores and predators. This knowledge is crucial for gaining a comprehensive understanding of the ecological implications of rhizobia symbiosis on these interactions.
与植物根系相关的微生物会显著影响植物防御的质量和数量。然而,土壤微生物对地上多营养级相互作用的自下而上的影响在很大程度上仍未得到充分研究。为了填补这一空白,我们研究了固氮根瘤菌对豆科植物 - 食草动物 - 寄生蜂多营养级相互作用的化学介导效应。为此,我们首先研究了根瘤菌与豆类植物的关联对食草毛虫及其寄生蜂的级联效应,随后研究了根瘤菌如何影响植物挥发物和花外蜜。我们的目标是了解这些植物介导的效应如何影响寄生蜂。接种根瘤菌的利马豆植物生长得更好,根瘤数量与防御性氰化物化合物呈正相关。尽管这些化学防御有所增加,但毛虫更喜欢在接种根瘤菌的植物上取食且生长得更快。此外,叶片受损后植物挥发物的释放模式在接种处理之间存在明显差异,接种植物比未接种植物产生更多的倍半萜和苄腈。尽管存在这些差异,但寄生蜂同样被接种或未接种根瘤菌的植物所吸引。然而,在取食接种根瘤菌植物的毛虫上,[某种寄生蜂]的产卵和后代发育情况更好。我们还表明,接种根瘤菌的普通豆植物比未接种的植物产生更多的花外蜜,且碳氢化合物浓度更高。因此,当用接种根瘤菌植物的花外蜜喂养时,寄生蜂的表现更好。虽然豆类 - 根瘤菌共生对毛虫的总体影响是积极的,但根瘤菌也通过毛虫宿主间接使寄生蜂受益,并通过提高高质量花外蜜的产量直接使寄生蜂受益。这项研究强调了探索影响食草动物和捕食者之间动态关系的不同方面和化学机制的重要性。这些知识对于全面理解根瘤菌共生对这些相互作用的生态影响至关重要。