4.5 Article

Microbiota, pathogens, and parasites as mediators of tritrophic interactions between insect herbivores, plants, and pollinators

期刊

JOURNAL OF INVERTEBRATE PATHOLOGY
卷 186, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jip.2021.107589

关键词

Bees; Caterpillars; Gut microbiome; Herbivore-induced plant defense; Indirect defense; Multitrophic interactions; Symbionts

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资金

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch project [HAW09051-H, HAW09043-H]

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Microbes associated with insects play a significant role in the interactions between herbivorous insects, pollinators, and their host plants. These interactions can have implications for the health and immunity of pollinators, highlighting the importance of plant quality, gut microbiomes, and multitrophic interactions between herbivores and pollinators. Additionally, other herbivore-associated factors, such as agricultural inputs aimed at pest control, can also impact pollinator microbiomes.
Insect-associated microbes, including pathogens, parasites, and symbionts, influence the interactions of herbivorous insects and pollinators with their host plants. Moreover, herbivory-induced changes in plant resource allocation and defensive chemistry can influence pollinator behavior. This suggests that the outcomes of interactions between herbivores, their microbes and host plants could have implications for pollinators. As epizootic diseases occur at high population densities, pathogen and parasite-mediated effects on plants could have landscape-level impacts on foraging pollinators. The goal of this minireview is to highlight the potential for an herbivore's multitrophic interactions to trigger plant-mediated effects on the immunity and health of pollinators. We highlight the importance of plant quality and gut microbiomes in bee health, and how caterpillars as model herbivores interact with pathogens, parasites, and symbionts to affect plant quality, which forms the centerpiece of multitrophic interactions between herbivores and pollinators. We also discuss the impacts of other herbivore-associated factors, such as agricultural inputs aimed at decreasing herbivorous pests, on pollinator microbiomes.

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