| Literature DB >> 19513244 |
Roxina Soler1, Jeffrey A Harvey, T Martijn Bezemer, Josef F Stuefer.
Abstract
Plants can act as vertical communication channels or 'green phones' linking soil-dwelling insects and insects in the aboveground ecosystem. When root-feeding insects attack a plant, the direct defense system of the shoot is activated, leading to an accumulation of phytotoxins in the leaves. The protection of the plant shoot elicited by root damage can impair the survival, growth and development of aboveground insect herbivores, thereby creating plant-based functional links between soil-dwelling insects and insects that develop in the aboveground ecosystem. The interactions between spatially separated insects below- and aboveground are not restricted to root and foliar plant-feeding insects, but can be extended to higher trophic levels such as insect parasitoids. Here we discuss some implications of plants acting as communication channels or 'green phones' between root and foliar-feeding insects and their parasitoids, focusing on recent findings that plants attacked by root-feeding insects are significantly less attractive for the parasitoids of foliar-feeding insects.Keywords: above-belowground interactions; green phones; multitrophic plant-insect interactions; parasitoids; plant defense; plant volatiles
Year: 2008 PMID: 19513244 PMCID: PMC2634485 DOI: 10.4161/psb.3.8.6338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Signal Behav ISSN: 1559-2316