Title: | No time for candy: passionfruit (Passiflora edulis) plants down-regulate damage-induced extra floral nectar production in response to light signals of competition |
Author(s): | Izaguirre MM; Mazza CA; Astigueta MS; Ciarla AM; Ballare CL; |
Address: | "Facultad de Agronomia, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina" |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00442-013-2721-9 |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1432-1939 (Electronic) 0029-8549 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Plant fitness is often defined by the combined effects of herbivory and competition, and plants must strike a delicate balance between their ability to capture limiting resources and defend against herbivore attack. Many plants use indirect defenses, such as volatile compounds and extra floral nectaries (EFN), to attract canopy arthropods that are natural enemies of herbivorous organisms. While recent evidence suggests that upon perception of low red to far-red (R:FR) ratios, which signal the proximity of competitors, plants down-regulate resource allocation to direct chemical defenses, it is unknown if a similar phytochrome-mediated response occurs for indirect defenses. We evaluated the interactive effects of R:FR ratio and simulated herbivory on nectar production by EFNs of passion fruit (Passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa). The activity of petiolar EFNs dramatically increased in response to simulated herbivory and hormonal treatment with methyl jasmonate (MeJA). Low R:FR ratios, which induced a classic 'shade-avoidance' repertoire of increased stem elongation in P. edulis, strongly suppressed the EFN response triggered by simulated herbivory or MeJA application. Strikingly, the EFN response to wounding and light quality was localized to the branches that received the treatments. In vines like P. edulis, a local response would allow the plants to precisely adjust their light harvesting and defense phenotypes to the local conditions encountered by individual branches when foraging for resources in patchy canopies. Consistent with the emerging paradigm that phytochrome regulation of jasmonate signaling is a central modulator of adaptive phenotypic plasticity, our results demonstrate that light quality is a strong regulator of indirect defenses" |
Keywords: | "Acetates/pharmacology Animals Ants/physiology Behavior, Animal Cyclopentanes/pharmacology Down-Regulation *Herbivory *Light Oxylipins/pharmacology Passiflora/drug effects/physiology/*radiation effects Plant Development/drug effects/radiation effects Plant;" |
Notes: | "MedlineIzaguirre, Miriam M Mazza, Carlos A Astigueta, Maria S Ciarla, Ana M Ballare, Carlos L eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Germany 2013/07/11 Oecologia. 2013 Sep; 173(1):213-21. doi: 10.1007/s00442-013-2721-9. Epub 2013 Jul 10" |