4.6 Article

Correlations between physical and chemical defences in plants: tradeoffs, syndromes, or just many different ways to skin a herbivorous cat?

期刊

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
卷 198, 期 1, 页码 252-263

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.12116

关键词

cyanogenesis; extrafloral nectaries; hair; leaf toughness; lipid; plantherbivore interactions; spines; tannin

资金

  1. ARC
  2. Victoria University of Wellington
  3. UNSW
  4. Amazon Conservation Association
  5. Australian Geographic
  6. Spanish Ministry of Education [PR2011-0491]
  7. NSF CAREER award
  8. CONACYT
  9. DGAPA-UNAM
  10. Claude Leon Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Most plant species have a range of traits that deter herbivores. However, understanding of how different defences are related to one another is surprisingly weak. Many authors argue that defence traits trade off against one another, while others argue that they form coordinated defence syndromes. We collected a dataset of unprecedented taxonomic and geographic scope (261 species spanning 80 families, from 75 sites across the globe) to investigate relationships among four chemical and six physical defences. Five of the 45 pairwise correlations between defence traits were significant and three of these were tradeoffs. The relationship between species' overall chemical and physical defence levels was marginally nonsignificant (P=0.08), and remained nonsignificant after accounting for phylogeny, growth form and abundance. Neither categorical principal component analysis (PCA) nor hierarchical cluster analysis supported the idea that species displayed defence syndromes. Our results do not support arguments for tradeoffs or for coordinated defence syndromes. Rather, plants display a range of combinations of defence traits. We suggest this lack of consistent defence syndromes may be adaptive, resulting from selective pressure to deploy a different combination of defences to coexisting species.

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