Inducible Responses in the Brown Seaweed Ecklonia cava: The Role of Grazer Identity and Season

1 Plants must either tolerate consumption or defend themselves against grazer attacks. Selection for phenotypically plastic antiherbivory responses has been suggested for many plants, including a few species of seaweed, but little is known about its specificity or seasonality. 2 Multi-factorial expe...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of ecology 2006-01, Vol.94 (1), p.243-249
Hauptverfasser: Molis, Markus, Körner, Jochen, Ko, Young Wook, Kim, Jeong Ha, Wahl, Martin
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container_issue 1
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container_title The Journal of ecology
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creator Molis, Markus
Körner, Jochen
Ko, Young Wook
Kim, Jeong Ha
Wahl, Martin
description 1 Plants must either tolerate consumption or defend themselves against grazer attacks. Selection for phenotypically plastic antiherbivory responses has been suggested for many plants, including a few species of seaweed, but little is known about its specificity or seasonality. 2 Multi-factorial experiments tested the effects of consumer identity (Littorina brevicula vs. Haliotis discus) and season (summer vs. autumn) on the induction of antiherbivory defences in the brown seaweed Ecklonia cava. Following a grazer-free acclimation phase, algae were incubated with grazers (treatment phase) and, subsequently, without grazers (recovery phase). Feeding preference assays, were used to assess differences in consumption rates between grazer-exposed and control plants. 3 In summer, Littorina, but not Haliotis, induced defence in Ecklonia. This defence vanished by the end of the recovery phase. In autumn, neither exposure to direct attack nor to waterborne cues induced defensive responses. 4 Both consumer identity and season of consumption can influence the ability of a given macroalgal species to induce antiherbivory defences. Tailoring such responses to spatial and temporal variation in grazer pressure could have profound ecological implications, for example changing food webs and community structure.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2005.01058.x
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subjects Algae
Animal and plant ecology
Animal behavior
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Autumn
Biodiversity
Biological and medical sciences
Chemical ecology
consumption
Ecklonia cava
Ecology
Food chains
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
grazer specificity
Grazing
Haliotis discus
Herbivores
Human ecology
Interactions with Biotic Agents: Pathogens and Herbivores
Littorina brevicula
macroalgae
Marine ecology
plant–animal interaction
seasonality
Seaweeds
Summer
title Inducible Responses in the Brown Seaweed Ecklonia cava: The Role of Grazer Identity and Season
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