Grasshopper crop and midgut extract effects on plants: an example of reward feedback

Acid extracts and a resultant fraction from solid-phase extraction (SPE) of Romalea guttata crop and midgut tissues induce sorghum (Sorghum bicolor var. Rio) coleoptile growth in 24-h incubations an average of 49% above untreated controls. When combined with plant auxin, indole-acetic acid (IAA), th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1995-06, Vol.92 (12), p.5475-5478
Hauptverfasser: Dyer, M.I. (University of Georgia, Athens, GA.), Moon, A.M, Brown, M.R, Crossley, D.A. Jr
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Acid extracts and a resultant fraction from solid-phase extraction (SPE) of Romalea guttata crop and midgut tissues induce sorghum (Sorghum bicolor var. Rio) coleoptile growth in 24-h incubations an average of 49% above untreated controls. When combined with plant auxin, indole-acetic acid (IAA), the SPE fraction shows a synergistic reaction, yielding increases in coleoptile growth that average 295% above untreated controls and 8% above IAA standards. The interaction lowered the point of maximum sensitivity of IAA 3 orders of magnitude, resulting in a new IAA physiological set point at 10(-7) g/ml. This synergism suggests that contents in animal regurgitants making their way into plant tissue during feeding may produce a positive feedback in plant growth and development following herbivory. Such a process, also known as reward feedback, may exert major controls on ecosystem-level relationships in nature
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.92.12.5475