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1.
Several studies have found genetic variation in plant resistance to herbivory. One of the explanations suggested for the observed intermediate levels of resistance are the costs of resistance, i.e., negative genetic correlations between resistance and other fitness components that may constrain the evolution of resistance. We studied the cost of herbivore resistance by investigating the genetic correlations between resistance traits and plant growth traits, and between resistance to insect and mammalian herbivores in cloned saplings of silver birch, Betula pendula. We used the performance of a geometrid moth, Epirrita autumnata, as an indicator of insect resistance. The numbers of resin droplets at the base and at the tip of the saplings correlate with mammalian resistance, and were thus used here as indicators of vole and hare resistance, respectively. We have previously observed genetic variation in these resistance traits. Further, we examined the correlations between several groups of secondary chemicals and plant growth traits. Finally, to reveal the effect of environmental factors on the trade-offs mentioned above, we investigated the correlations in saplings that were grown at two nutrient levels. We found significant negative correlations between indices of constitutive insect resistance and relative height growth in non-fertilized saplings, indicating cost of constitutive insect resistance. The two groups of secondary chemicals that have been shown to correlate strongly with constitutive insect resistance, i.e., condensed tannins and flavonol glycosides (especially myricetin glycosides), had different genetic correlations with plant traits; the concentration of condensed tannins did not correlate negatively with any of the plant traits, whereas the concentration of flavonol glycosides correlated negatively with plant height. Insect and mammalian resistance did not correlate negatively, indicating no ecological trade-offs.  相似文献   

2.
Plants respond to feeding injury by chewing insects by inducing both a general response to mechanical wounding and a specific response to herbivore-associated elicitors. In both cases, plant response involves complex biochemical and physiological changes. We compared chemical and physical responses of paper birch (B. papyrifera) and European white birch (B. pendula) stems to mechanical injury to determine if aspects of their wound response correspond with the much higher resistance of paper birch to bronze birch borer (Agrilus anxius). We also characterized stem responses to mechanical wounding plus bronze birch borer larval homogenate to determine if larval cues elicited a more specific response than mechanical wounding alone. In both species, wounding decreased concentrations of individual phenolics, total phenolics, and condensed tannins, perhaps because they were diverted to lignin biosynthesis, the concentration of which increased. Nitrogen concentration increased in both species while free amino acid concentrations declined, perhaps because they were utilized to synthesize proteins. Application of larval homogenate did not elicit a response different from that induced by mechanical injury. When comparing wound responses of the two birch species, phenolic profiles differed most conspicuously. However, multivariate analyses revealed no differences between constitutive and wound-induced phenolic profiles within each species, and the rate of wound periderm growth was equivalent between species. These results suggest that components of the wound response we measured may not contribute to interspecific variation in bronze birch borer resistance of paper birch and European white birch.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract 1. Many Salicaceae species naturally form hybrid swarms with parental and hybrid taxa that differ in secondary chemical profile and in resistance to herbivores. Theoretically, the differential mortality in the seedling stage can lead to changes in trait expression and alter subsequent interactions between plants and herbivores. This study examines whether herbivory by the generalist slug Arion subfuscus, which causes extensive mortality in young willow seedlings, causes shifts in (a) the foliar chemistry of F2 willow hybrids (Salix sericea and Salix eriocephala), and (b) the subsequent susceptibility to Japanese Beetles, Popillia japonica. 2. In 2001, two populations of F2 seedlings were generated: those that survived slug herbivory (80–90% of seedlings placed in the field were killed by the slugs) were designated as S-plants, whereas C-plants (controls) experienced no mortality. 3. Common garden experiments with cuttings from these populations, in 2001 and 2002, revealed extensive variation in the phenolic chemistry of F2 hybrids, but revealed no significant difference between S- and C-plants, although the levels of foliar nutrients, proteins and nitrogen tended to be higher in S-plants. 4. Concentrations of salicortin and 2′-cinnamoylsalicortin explained 55 and 38% of the the variation in leaf damage caused by Japanese beetles, and secondary chemistry was highly correlated within replicate clones (salicortin R2= 0.85, 2-cinnamoylsalicortin R2= 0.77, condensed tannins R2= 0.68). 5. Interestingly, Japanese beetle damage and condensed tannins were positively correlated within the S-plants, but not in the C-plants, suggesting that slugs had selected for plants with a positive relationship between tannins and P. japonica damage. This is unlikely to be a consequence of a preference for tannins, but is suggested to be related to the elevated nutrient levels in the S-plants, perhaps in combination with the complex-binding properties of tannins. 6. The damage was highly correlated within replicate clones and a model choice analysis suggested that Japanese beetle damage may be explained by four factors: concentrations of salicortin, condensed tannins, and nitrogen, as well as the specific leaf area (thick leaves were damaged less).  相似文献   

4.
5.
The composition and concentrations of phenolic compounds were studied in the first true leaves, cotyledons, stems and roots of 2.5-week-old seedlings of mountain birch ( Betula pubescens ssp. czerepanovii ). The differences in secondary compounds among these plant parts were both qualitative and quantitative. In all parts, condensed tannins accounted for more than 50% of the phenolics. In the first true leaves and cotyledons, chlorogenic acid was the most abundant of the HPLC phenolics. The main components in stems were (+)-catechins and rhododendrins whereas in roots, the main components were ellagitannins. The seedlings were grown at three levels of nitrogen supply (very low-N, low-N, moderate-N), and the effect of nitrogen on concentrations of phenolic compounds was studied in all plant parts. The dry weight of all plant parts, except the roots, increased with increased nitrogen. In all parts, the concentration of condensed tannins was higher at lower levels of nitrogen than at moderate-N. The concentrations of total HPLC phenolics and also those of the compound groups of HPLC phenolics were, however, affected only in the first true leaves and roots. The concentrations in the first true leaves were generally higher in seedlings grown at very low-N and low-N than in seedlings grown at moderate-N. The concentrations in roots were highest at low-N. Not all compounds responded to nitrogen supply in the same manner. The changes in concentrations cannot be exclusively interpreted as changes in the accumulation of phenolic compounds, due to dilution caused by the increase in biomass in better nitrogen availability. There were differences in carbon allocation between condensed tannins and HPLC phenolics in seedlings grown at different nitrogen levels.  相似文献   

6.
The pentacyclic triterpenoids from birch (Betula platyphylla suk) have broad pharmacological activities and can be potentially used for the development of anti-cancer and anti-AIDS drugs. In this study, we explored the effects of spraying 3-year-old white birch with different concentration of methyl jasmonate (MeJA) and salicylic acid (SA) on the expression of key genes in triterpenoid biosynthesis pathways and on the accumulation and physiological characteristics of triterpenoids in birch saplings. The results showed that spraying different concentration of MeJA and SA could obviously promote accumulation of total triterpenoids in 3-year-old white birch. The triterpenoid content in the stem bark was increased by 46.11 %, reaching 81.86 mg/g, after 1 day of treatment with 1 mmol·L?1 MeJA (MJ2), and by 45.07 %, reaching 91.4 mg/g, after 14 days of treatment with 5 mmol·L?1 SA (SA1). In addition, MeJA and SA treatment increased the contents of chlorophyll a and b, antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD), and catalase (CAT), as well as photosynthetic performance, and affected the content of soluble sugar and soluble protein in birch leaf. Fluorescence quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) results showed that MeJA and SA treatment deferentially enhanced the key gene expression of cycloartenol synthase (BPX and BPX2), lupeol synthase (BPW) and beta-amyrin synthase (BPY) in triterpenoid synthesis pathway in birch bark and leaves. The results showed that MeJA and SA induced triterpenoid synthesis of birch plant is closely related with not only the expression of key genes of triterpenoid synthesis pathway but also photosynthesis, anti-stress response and physiological indexes, suggesting that regulation of triterpenoid synthesis of birch by MeJA and SA may involve in more complex mechanisms at physiological and molecular levels.  相似文献   

7.
Few studies have addressed how plant chemical defenses that directly affect herbivores in turn affect consumption patterns of vertebrates at higher trophic levels. We studied how variable foliar chemistry of trembling aspen ( Populus tremuloides Michx.) affects the diet preferences of an avian insectivore feeding on an introduced herbivore, the gypsy moth ( Lymantria dispar L.).
Black-capped chickadees ( Poecile atricapilla ) were offered paired choices of gypsy moth caterpillars feeding on one of three genotypes of aspen that differed in chemical composition. Chickadees chose to eat caterpillars fed aspen foliage with low levels of both condensed tannins and phenolic glycosides, or caterpillars fed foliage with high levels of tannins and low levels of phenolic glycosides, over caterpillars fed foliage with low levels of condensed tannins and high levels of phenolic glycosides. In addition, diet choices of the birds were affected by their previous experience. These findings are consistent with the "extended phenotype" concept, in that genetically-based chemical traits in an ecologically dominant plant influence the feeding behavior of third trophic level organisms, whose efficacy as regulators of herbivore populations may in turn be modified.  相似文献   

8.
1 The present study assessed the relationship between clonally variable rates of defoliation in trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) and two potential resistance traits: defensive chemistry and leaf phenology. 2 In 2001, coincident with a major outbreak of the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria Hubner) in the northcentral U.S.A., we monitored defoliation rates, phytochemical composition, and foliar development in 30 clones of trembling aspen. Leaf chemistry was also assessed in re‐flushed leaves and 2 years post‐outbreak. 3 Early in the season, differences in defoliation among clones were substantial but, by mid‐June, all clones were completely defoliated. Leaf nitrogen, condensed tannins, and phenolic glycosides varied among clones but did not relate to defoliation levels. Budbreak phenology differed by 3 weeks among clones and clones that broke bud early or late relative to forest tent caterpillar eclosion experienced reduced rates of defoliation. 4 Defoliation led to increased tannins and slight decreases in phenolic glycoside concentrations in damaged leaf remnants, but to moderately decreased tannins and a six‐fold increase in phenolic glycosides in reflushed leaves. This shift in chemical composition may significantly affect late season herbivores. 5 These results suggest that aspen chemical resistance mechanisms are ineffective during intense episodic eruptions of outbreak folivores such as the forest tent caterpillar. Variable budbreak phenology may lead to differential susceptibility during less intense outbreak years and, at peak forest tent caterpillar population densities, mechanisms affording tolerance are probably more important than chemical defences.  相似文献   

9.
If herbivory is unevenly distributed among different types of plants, or if individual plants differ in their response to herbivory, herbivores may affect seedling growth and survival, and consequently plant population structure. In this study we examined variation in resistance to insect herbivory and in growth responses to feeding among 20 silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) genotypes representing variation within a natural population. Birch seedlings were grown in dense stands in random arrangement so that seedlings of different genotypes competed with each other. On insect exposure plots natural colonization of insects was allowed, and insect removal plots were sprayed with insecticide. Resistance to insect herbivory was measured as the inverse of leaf damage, and growth responses of seedlings to feeding were determined as the change in seedling height relative to the amount of damage. Resistance varied significantly among genotypes, but growth responses to feeding did not. In fertilized seedlings, resistance correlated negatively with height, indicating a trade-off between resistance and growth. The absence of such a correlation in non-fertilized seedlings is a sign of environmental effects on the cost of resistance. Growth responses to feeding did not correlate with either resistance or growth. Nevertheless, different effects of the actual damage on height increase changed the positions of the genotypes in the size hierarchy of the experimental populations. Thus, even moderate levels of insect herbivory can change the outcome of competitive interactions between birch genotypes.Due to an error in the citation line, this revised PDF (published in December 2003) deviates from the printed version, and is the correct and authoritative version of the paper.  相似文献   

10.
Fire and herbivory are primary disturbances that often overlap and strongly influence plant community development, but it is unclear how herbivory changes in relation to variability in burn severity. With climate change expected to alter fire regimes globally there is a critical need to understand how heterogeneity in post‐fire habitat conditions modifies plant–herbivore interactions. We examined herbivory patterns, growth responses and defense chemistry expression (phenolic glycoside, condensed tannins) of regenerating aspen Populus tremuloides that experienced variable burn severity in the 2010 Twitchell Canyon Fire, Utah, USA. Browse damage was approximately 60% lower in moderate and high burn severity plots compared to low severity and unburned plots. Aspen regeneration density was 2.3 and 3.1 fold greater in high and moderate severity burn plots than in low severity and unburned plots. High burn severity stimulated photosynthesis, vertical growth and biomass accumulation. Defense chemistry expression responded dynamically over time depending on burn severity. From June to August, phenolic glycoside concentrations showed no significant change in unburned and low severity fire conditions but increased 79% and 139% in moderate and high severity burn environments. By the end of summer, condensed tannins increased six‐fold in high severity burn plots, with increases of 50% or less in the lower burn severity plots. Deer activity, as defined by pellet counts, was inversely related to fire severity and positively related to browse damage. Elk and cattle activity showed no significant relationship with browse activity. Greater light availability in higher severity burn environments appears to enhance tolerance and resistance of aspen against herbivory by increasing growth potential and defense chemistry expression of aspen. These results suggest that burn severity influences plant–herbivore interactions through bottom–up and top–down mechanisms, and that higher fire severity increases post‐disturbance vegetation recruitment potential by increasing resilience to herbivory.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the three‐way interaction of elevated CO2, nitrogen (N), and temperature (T), and the two‐way interaction of elevated CO2 and early‐season defoliation on the secondary chemistry and resistance of Eurasian silver birch (Betula pendula) and North American paper birch (B. papyrifera) against the Eurasian hare (Lepus timidus) and the North American eastern cottontail rabbit (Sylvilagus floridanus), respectively. Elevated CO2 decreased the palatability of winter‐dormant silver and paper birch stems to both hares and rabbits, respectively. But the effect on hares was only apparent at intermediate levels of N fertilization. Elevated T had no effect on palatability. The effects of elevated CO2, N, and T on levels of silver birch bark phenolics and terpenoids were dominated by two‐way interactions between N and CO2, and N and T. Generally, however, N amendments elicited a parabolic response in carbon partitioning to most biosynthetic classes of silver birch phenolics (i.e. highest concentrations occurring at intermediate N). CO2 elevation was most enhancing at highest levels of N. On the other hand, T increases, more often than not, elicited reductions in phenolics, but especially so at the highest N level. In the case of B. papyrifera, elevated CO2 increased carbon partitioning to Folin‐Denis stem and branch phenolics and condensed tannins. Early‐season defoliation, on the other hand, had no effect on phenolics and tannins but lowered both N and energy levels of branches. Elevated CO2 substantially ameliorated the negative effects of severe defoliation on tree growth. These results support the hypothesis that continuing anthropogenic alterations of the atmosphere may trigger significant changes in plant phenotypic resistance to mammalian herbivores owing to an increasing net carbon balance between the highly vagile supply and demand capacities of plant carbon sources and sinks.  相似文献   

12.
This is a study of the impact of increased ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation on the secondary chemistry of Salix myrsinifolia (dark-leaved willow). For nearly two decades, the loss of stratospheric ozone above the high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere has increased UV-B radiation (280–320 nm) over the long-term mean. Willows (Salicaceae) are widely distributed in these northern regions. To determine the effects of increased UV-B radiation on willows, the plantlets of three clones of S. myrsinifolia were grown under ambient (3.6 kJ m−2 day−1) or enhanced (7.18 kJ m−2 day−1) UV-B irradiance. After the 2-week indoor experiment, the concentrations of UV-B-screening phenolics (flavonoids and phenolic acids) and low-UV-B-screening phenolics (salicylates and condensed tannins) in fresh leaves were investigated and the biomass of leaves, stems and roots was determined. As expected, the total amount of flavonoids in willow leaves clearly increased when plantlets were exposed to higher UV-B irradiation. However, the degree of increase of individual compounds varied: luteolin-7-glucoside, monomethyl-monocoumaryl-luteolin-7-glucoside and one myricetin derivative increased significantly, while the apigenin-7-glucuronide increased only slightly. The enhanced UV-B also increased the amount of p -hydroxycinnamic acid derivative. The UV-B effects on other phenolic acids and tannins were minor. In contrast to the other phenolics, the amounts of two salicylates, salicin and saligenin, decreased under enhanced UV-B irradiation. Our results indicate that the concentrations of both UV-B-screening and low-UV-B-screening phenolic compounds in leaves of S. myrsinifolia may vary in response to elevated UV-B radiation. However, while the UV-B protective flavonoids and phenolic acids accumulate during UV-B exposure, the concentrations of certain salicylates decrease.  相似文献   

13.
Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) exhibits striking intraspecific variation in concentrations of phenolic glycosides, compounds that play important roles in mediating interactions with herbivorous insects. This research was conducted to assess the contribution of genetic variation to overall phenotypic variation in aspen chemistry and interactions with gypsy moths (Lymantria dispar) and forest tent caterpillars (Malacosoma disstria). Thirteen aspen clones were propagated from field-collected root material. Insect performance assays, measuring survival, development, growth, and food utilization indices, were conducted with second and/or fourth instars. Leaf samples were assayed for water, nitrogen, total nonstructural carbohydrates, condensed tannins, and phenolic glycosides. Results showed substantial among-clone variation in the performance of both insect species. Chemical analyses revealed significant among-clone variation in all foliar constituents and that variation in allelochemical contents differed more than variation in primary metabolites. Regression analyses indicated that phenolic glycosides were the dominant factor responsible for among-clone variation in insect performance. We also found significant genetic trade-offs between growth and defense among aspen clones. Our results suggest that genetic factors are likely responsible for much of the tremendous phenotypic variation in secondary chemistry exhibited by aspen, and that the genetic structure of aspen populations may play important roles in the evolution of interactions with phytophagous insects. Received: 14 May 1996 / Accepted: 29 January 1997  相似文献   

14.
We conducted a study of natural variation in functional leaf traits and herbivory in 116 clones of European aspen, Populus tremula L., the Swedish Aspen (SwAsp) collection, originating from ten degrees of latitude across Sweden and grown in a common garden. In surveys of phytophagous arthropods over two years, we found the aspen canopy supports nearly 100 morphospecies. We identified significant broad-sense heritability of plant functional traits, basic plant defence chemistry, and arthropod community traits. The majority of arthropods were specialists, those coevolved with P. tremula to tolerate and even utilize leaf defence compounds. Arthropod abundance and richness were more closely related to plant growth rates than general chemical defences and relationships were identified between the arthropod community and stem growth, leaf and petiole morphology, anthocyanins, and condensed tannins. Heritable genetic variation in plant traits in young aspen was found to structure arthropod community; however no single trait drives the preferences of arthropod folivores among young aspen genotypes. The influence of natural variation in plant traits on the arthropod community indicates the importance of maintaining genetic variation in wild trees as keystone species for biodiversity. It further suggests that aspen can be a resource for the study of mechanisms of natural resistance to herbivores.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the between-tree and within-tree variation in the composition and content of foliar low-molecular-weight phenolics (LMWP) of European white birch ( Betula pendula Roth) during the unfolding of vegetative buds and during early leaf development. In buds, the major groups of phenolic compounds were hydrolysable tannins and flavonoid aglycones, whereas, later during leaf development, the flavonoid glycosides accounted for most of the total LMWP. The content of total LMWP, as well as individual compounds, varied largely among individual trees, while variation within an individual tree was low. The biosynthetic origin of individual compounds or compound groups is discussed in order to explain the main patterns in leaf chemistry during bud unfolding and early leaf development.  相似文献   

16.
The performance of hybrids depends upon the inheritance and expression of resistance traits. Secondary chemicals are one such resistance trait. In this study, we measured the concentrations of phenolic glycosides and condensed tannins in parental and F1 hybrid willows to examine the sources of chemical variation among hybrids. S. sericea produces phenolic glycosides, salicortin and 2'-cinnamoylsalicortin, and low concentrations of condensed tannin in its leaves. In contrast, S. eriocephala produces no phenolic glycosides but high concentrations of condensed tannins in its leaves. These traits are inherited quantitatively in hybrids. On average, F1 hybrids are intermediate for condensed tannins, suggesting predominantly additive inheritance or balanced ambidirectional dominance of this defensive chemical from the parental species. In contrast, the concentration of phenolic glycosides is lower than the parental midpoint, indicating directional dominance. However, there is extensive variation among F1 hybrids. The concentration of tannin and phenolic glycosides in F1 hybrid families is either (1) lower than the midpoint, (2) higher than the midpoint, or (3) indistinguishable from the midpoint of the two parental taxa. It appears that the production of the phenolic glycosides, especially 2'-cinnamoylsalicortin, is controlled by one or more recessive alleles. We also observed a two-fold or greater difference in concentration between some hybrid families. We discuss how chemical variation may effect the relative susceptibility of hybrid willows to herbivores.  相似文献   

17.
Herbivores are important drivers of plant population dynamics and community composition in natural and managed systems. Intraspecific genetic diversity of long‐lived plants like trees might shape patterns of herbivory by different guilds of herbivores that trees experience through time. However, previous studies on plant genetic diversity effects on herbivores have been largely short‐term. We investigated how tree genotypic variation and diversity influence herbivory of silver birch Betula pendula in a long‐term field experiment. Using clones of eight genotypes, we constructed experimental plots consisting of one, two, four or eight genotypes, and measured damage by five guilds of arthropod herbivores twice a year over three different years (four, six and nine years after the experiment was established). Genotypes varied significantly for most types of herbivore damage, but genotype resistance rankings often shifted over time, and none of the clones was more resistant than all others to all types of herbivores. At the plot level, birch genotypic diversity had significant positive additive effect on leaf rollers and negative non‐additive effects on chewing herbivores and gall makers. In contrast, leaf‐mining and leaf‐tying damage was not influenced by birch genotypic diversity. Within diverse plots, the direction of genotypic diversity effects varied depending on birch genotype, some having lower and some having higher herbivory in mixed stands. This research highlights the importance of long‐term studies including different feeding guilds of herbivores to understand the effects of plant genetic diversity on arthropod communities. Different responses of various feeding guilds to genotypic diversity and shifts in resistance of individual genotypes over time indicate that genotypic mixtures are unlikely to result in overall reduction in herbivory over time.  相似文献   

18.
Plant adaptations for defense against herbivory vary both among species and among genotypes. Moreover, numerous forms of within-plant variation in defense, including ontogeny, induction, and seasonal gradients, allow plants to avoid expending resources on defense when herbivores are absent. We used an 18-year-old cottonwood common garden composed of Populus fremontii, Populus angustifolia, and their naturally occurring F1 hybrids (collectively referred to as ??cross types??) to quantify and compare the relative influences of three hierarchical levels of variation (between cross types, among genotypes, and within individual genotypes) on univariate and multivariate phytochemical defense traits. Within genotypes, we evaluated ontogeny, induction (following cottonwood leaf beetle herbivory), and seasonal variation. We compared the effect sizes of each of these sources of variation on the plant defense phenotype. Three major patterns emerged. First, we observed significant differences in concentrations of defense phytochemicals among cross types, and/or among genotypes within cross types. Second, we found significant genetic variation for within-plant differences in phytochemical defenses: (a) based on ontogeny, levels of constitutive phenolic glycosides were nearly three times greater in the mature zone than in the juvenile zone within one cottonwood cross type, but did not significantly differ within another cross type; (b) induced levels of condensed tannins increased up to 65?% following herbivore damage within one cottonwood cross type, but were not significantly altered in another cross type; and (c) concentrations of condensed tannins tended to increase across the season, but did not do so across all cross types. Third, our estimates of effect size demonstrate that the magnitude of within-plant variation in a phytochemical defense can rival the magnitude of differences in defense among genotypes and/or cross types. We conclude that, in cottonwood and likely other plant species, multiple forms of within-individual variation have the potential to substantially influence ecological and evolutionary processes.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of this study was to investigate the preference of a leaf beetle to different Salix clones, and to relate this preference to plant chemistry. The preference of Gonioctena linnaeana Schrank (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) was tested in cafeteria experiments using its host Salix triandra L. (Salicaeae) from three Swedish isolated populations and one Russian population from the main distribution range of the host. The leaves from the different host clones were used to analyse the content of phenolic glucosides and the amount of condensed tannins. The larvae did not show any feeding preferences for host clones from the population they originated from, but all Swedish host populations were preferred over the Russian host population. This suggests a preference for regional hosts. We analyzed whether leaf chemistry parameters may explain host plant preferences. Chemical analysis of the leaves showed that the quantities, but not the quality, of the phenolic compounds differed between populations. A Principal Component Analysis of the chemical data also highlighted a difference between the Swedish and Russian host plant populations. The two most important compounds separating Russian from Swedish clones were gallocatechin and salidroside. However, the difference in preference could also be a result of, for example, nutritional quality, water content, or leaf texture. The relative importance of these different factors should be evaluated in future experiments.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of elevated CO2 and temperature on the resource allocation pattern and resistance against mammalian herbivores of silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) were studied. Birch seedlings were grown through two growing seasons in closed‐top chambers exposed to four different treatments: ambient CO2 and temperature, elevated atmospheric CO2 (700 ppm) and ambient temperature, elevated temperature (+3°C above ambient) and ambient CO2, and a combination of elevated CO2 and temperature. After winter hardening of the seedlings, the growth of the seedlings was measured and the concentration of secondary compounds such as phenolics and papyriferic acid determined. The top parts of the stem were fed to hares, and the basal parts of the same stems were offered to voles. Elevated CO2 increased the height and basal diameter of the shoots, shoot biomass and total biomass of the seedlings but did not have any effect on secondary chemistry. Elevated temperature increased the height and shoot biomass, but did not have a significant effect on the total biomass of the seedlings. Elevated temperature decreased the concentration of condensed tannins and their precursor, (+)‐catechin, in the top part of the stems, but only the concentration of (+)‐catechin in the basal part of the stems. There were no significant interactive effects between CO2 and temperature on phenolics in the stems, while the concentration of papyriferic acid showed significant interaction in the top part of the stems. This indicates high accumulation of papyriferic acid in ambient CO2 under increased temperature. Consequently, elevated temperature increased the resistance of birch against hares, but did not affect the resistance of the basal parts of the same birches to voles. Our results indicate that the predicted climatic change will not necessarily lead to increased browsing damage by the mountain hare and the field vole to silver birch.  相似文献   

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