4.5 Article

Selection pressure by specialist and generalist insect herbivores leads to optimal constitutive plant defense. A mathematical model

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10763

Keywords

generalist insects; glucosinolates; mathematical model; natural enemies; optimal constitutive defense; specialist insects

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The Brassicaceae plants have a defense system against herbivory called the glucosinolate-myrosinase defense system. This defense system attracts specialist herbivores but deters generalist herbivores. By modeling the host selection behavior of insect herbivores and the emergence of their natural enemies, an optimal level of plant defense chemicals can be determined to minimize the overall herbivore pressure.
Brassicaceae plants have the glucosinolate-myrosinase defense system, jointly active against herbivory. However, constitutive glucosinolate (GLS) defense is observed to occur at levels that do not deter all insects from feeding. That prompts the question of why Brassicaceae plants have not evolved a higher constitutive defense. The answer may lie in the contrasting relationship between plant defense and host plant preference of specialist and generalist herbivores. GLS content increases a plant's susceptibility to specialist insects. In contrast, generalists are deterred by the plant GLSs. Although GLSs can attract the natural enemies (predators and parasitoids) of these herbivores, enemies can reduce herbivore pressure to some extent only. So, plants can be overrun by specialists if GLS content is too high, whereas generalists can invade the plants if it is too low. Therefore, an optimal constitutive plant defense can minimize the overall herbivore pressure. To explain the optimal defense theoretically, we model the contrasting host selection behavior of insect herbivores and the emergence of their natural enemies by non-autonomous ordinary differential equations, where the independent variable is the plant GLS concentration. From the model, we quantify the optimal amount of GLSs, which minimizes total herbivore (specialists and generalists) pressure. That quite successfully explains the evolution of constitutive defense in plants from the perspective of optimality theory. Specialist herbivores are attracted by constitutive plant defense while generalists are deterred by such a defense. Therefore, there is an optimal level of plant defense chemicals. By a mathematical model, we determine that optimum.image

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