Trade-Offs Between Plant Growth and Defense Against Insect Herbivory: An Emerging Mechanistic Synthesis

被引:419
作者
Zust, Tobias [1 ]
Agrawal, Anurag A. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bern, Inst Plant Sci, CH-3013 Bern, Switzerland
[2] Cornell Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Dept Entomol, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
来源
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PLANT BIOLOGY, VOL 68 | 2017年 / 68卷
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
resource allocation; growth rate estimation; induced plant defense; leaf economics spectrum; plant-insect interactions; signal transduction networks; MILKWEED ASCLEPIAS-SYRIACA; NICOTIANA-ATTENUATA; ARABIDOPSIS-THALIANA; JASMONIC ACID; FITNESS COSTS; BRASSICA-RAPA; GLUCOSINOLATE CONTENT; INDUCED RESISTANCE; SIGNALING PATHWAYS; INDUCED RESPONSES;
D O I
10.1146/annurev-arplant-042916-040856
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Costs of defense are central to our understanding of interactions between organisms and their environment, and defensive phenotypes of plants have long been considered to be constrained by trade-offs that reflect the allocation of limiting resources. Recent advances in uncovering signal transduction networks have revealed that defense trade-offs are often the result of regulatory "decisions" by the plant, enabling it to fine-tune its phenotype in response to diverse environmental challenges. We place these results in the context of classic studies in ecology and evolutionary biology, and propose a unifying framework for growth-defense trade-offs as a means to study the plant's allocation of limiting resources. Pervasive physiological costs constrain the upper limit to growth and defense traits, but the diversity of selective pressures on plants often favors negative correlations at intermediate trait levels. Despite the ubiquity of underlying costs of defense, the current challenge is using physiological and molecular approaches to predict the conditions where they manifest as detectable trade-offs.
引用
收藏
页码:513 / 534
页数:22
相关论文
共 137 条
[1]   Costs of induced responses and tolerance to herbivory in male and female fitness components of wild radish [J].
Agrawal, AA ;
Strauss, SY ;
Stout, MJ .
EVOLUTION, 1999, 53 (04) :1093-1104
[2]   On the study of plant defence and herbivory using comparative approaches: how important are secondary plant compounds [J].
Agrawal, Anurag A. ;
Weber, Marjorie G. .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2015, 18 (10) :985-991
[3]   Insect Herbivores Drive Real-Time Ecological and Evolutionary Change in Plant Populations [J].
Agrawal, Anurag A. ;
Hastings, Amy P. ;
Johnson, Marc T. J. ;
Maron, John L. ;
Salminen, Juha-Pekka .
SCIENCE, 2012, 338 (6103) :113-116
[4]   Attenuation of the Jasmonate Burst, Plant Defensive Traits, and Resistance to Specialist Monarch Caterpillars on Shaded Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) [J].
Agrawal, Anurag A. ;
Kearney, Emily E. ;
Hastings, Amy P. ;
Ramsey, Trey E. .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY, 2012, 38 (07) :893-901
[5]   Current trends in the evolutionary ecology of plant defence [J].
Agrawal, Anurag A. .
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2011, 25 (02) :420-432
[6]   THE COST OF DEFENSE AGAINST HERBIVORES - AN EXPERIMENTAL-STUDY OF TRICHOME PRODUCTION IN BRASSICA-RAPA [J].
AGREN, J ;
SCHEMSKE, DW .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1993, 141 (02) :338-350
[7]   Do plant species with high relative growth rates have poorer chemical defences? [J].
Almeida-Cortez, JS ;
Shipley, B ;
Arnason, JT .
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 1999, 13 (06) :819-827
[8]   Adaptive intrinsic growth rates: An integration across taxa [J].
Arendt, JD .
QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BIOLOGY, 1997, 72 (02) :149-177
[9]   A growth phenotyping pipeline for Arabidopsis thaliana integrating image analysis and rosette area modeling for robust quantification of genotype effects [J].
Arvidsson, Samuel ;
Perez-Rodriguez, Paulino ;
Mueller-Roeber, Bernd .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2011, 191 (03) :895-907
[10]   Temporal Dynamics of Growth and Photosynthesis Suppression in Response to Jasmonate Signaling [J].
Attaran, Elham ;
Major, Ian T. ;
Cruz, Jeffrey A. ;
Rosa, Bruce A. ;
Koo, Abraham J. K. ;
Chen, Jin ;
Kramer, David M. ;
He, Sheng Yang ;
Howe, Gregg A. .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2014, 165 (03) :1302-1314