4.2 Article

Not just the sum of its parts: Geographic variation and nonadditive effects of pyrazines in the chemical defence of an aposematic moth

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 7, Pages 1020-1031

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.14142

Keywords

antipredatory strategy; lepidoptera; multicomponent defence; predator-prey interactions; pyrazine; wood tiger moth

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The chemical defence of the wood tiger moth varies within and between populations, which is contradictory to the assumption that prey survival relies on the strength of defence. It was found that populations facing higher predation pressure have stronger chemical defences, suggesting that local predator selection plays a role. Additionally, the efficacy of chemical defence is influenced by both genetic and environmental factors.
Chemical defences often vary within and between populations both in quantity and quality, which is puzzling if prey survival is dependent on the strength of the defence. We investigated the within- and between-population variability in chemical defence of the wood tiger moth (Arctia plantaginis). The major components of its defences, SBMP (2-sec-butyl-3-methoxypyrazine) and IBMP (2-isobutyl-3-methoxypyrazine), are volatiles that deter bird attacks. We hypothesized that (1) variation in the chemical defences of male wood tiger moths reflects the local predation pressure; (2) observed differences in quantity and quality of defence among populations have a genetic basis; and (3) increasing concentrations of SBMP and IBMP will elicit greater aversive reactions in predators, with the two pyrazines having an additive effect on predators' avoidance. We found that (1) the chemical defence of wild moths partly reflects local predator selection: high predation pressure populations (Scotland and Georgia) had stronger chemical defences, but not lower variance, than the low-predation populations (Estonia and Finland). (2) Based on the common garden results, both genetic and environmental components seem to influence the strength of chemical defence in moth populations; and (3) IBMP alone did not provide protection against bird predators but worked against bird attacks only when combined with SBMP, and while SBMP was more effective at higher concentrations, IBMP was not. Altogether this suggests that, when it comes to pyrazine concentration, more is not always better, highlighting the importance of testing the efficacy of chemical defence and its components with relevant predators, as extrapolating from chemical data may be less than straightforward.

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