An exotic herbivorous insect drives the evolution of resistance in the exotic perennial herb Solidago altissima
Invasive plants often experience rapid changes in biological interactions by escaping from their original herbivores at their new habitats, and sometimes re-associating with those herbivores afterwards. However, little is known about whether the temporal changes in herbivorous impact work as a selec...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology (Durham) 2014-09, Vol.95 (9), p.2569-2578 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Invasive plants often experience rapid changes in biological interactions by escaping from their original herbivores at their new habitats, and sometimes re-associating with those herbivores afterwards. However, little is known about whether the temporal changes in herbivorous impact work as a selective agent for defensive traits of invaded plants.
Solidago altissima
(goldenrod) is a North American perennial that has widely invaded abandoned fields in Japan. Recently, an herbivorous insect
Corythucha marmorata
(lace bug), an exotic insect also from North America, which was first recorded in 2000 in Japan, has been expanding its habitat on
S. altissima
populations in Japan. In this study, we investigated whether the invasion of
C. marmorata
had a selective impact on the defensive traits of
S. altissima
, by conducting a field survey, a common garden experiment and microsatellite analysis. We compared quantitative genetic differentiation of traits (resistance, growth, and reproduction) and neutral molecular differentiation among 16
S. altissima
populations with different establishment years of
C. marmorata
.
The common garden experiment, in which plants were grown in a greenhouse and treated to either
C. marmorata
herbivory or no herbivory, revealed the presence of higher resistance, sexual reproduction, and asexual (rhizome) reproduction in populations subjected to a longer history of
C. marmorata
pressure. Such phenotypic variability among establishment years of lace bugs was likely driven by natural selection rather than stochastic events such as genetic drift and founder effects. In addition, when plants were exposed to lace bug herbivory, resistance had a positive relationship with sexual and asexual reproduction, although no relationship was found when plants were free from herbivory. These findings suggest that defensive traits in
S. altissima
have evolved locally in the last decade in response to the selective pressure of
C. marmorata
. |
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ISSN: | 0012-9658 1939-9170 |
DOI: | 10.1890/13-1455.1 |