| Literature DB >> 25077026 |
Mirka Macel1, Ric C H de Vos2, Jeroen J Jansen3, Wim H van der Putten4, Nicole M van Dam5.
Abstract
It is often assumed that exotic plants can become invasive when they possess novel secondary chemistry compared with native plants in the introduced range. Using untargeted metabolomic fingerprinting, we compared a broad range of metabolites of six successful exotic plant species and their native congeners of the family Asteraceae. Our results showed that plant chemistry is highly species-specific and diverse among both exotic and native species. Nonetheless, the exotic species had on average a higher total number of metabolites and more species-unique metabolites compared with their native congeners. Herbivory led to an overall increase in metabolites in all plant species. Generalist herbivore performance was lower on most of the exotic species compared with the native species. We conclude that high chemical diversity and large phytochemical uniqueness of the exotic species could be indicative of biological invasion potential.Entities:
Keywords: Asteraceae; LC-MS; Mamestra brassicae; Senecio; Solidago; herbivory; metabolomics; novel weapons; range expanding; secondary metabolites
Year: 2014 PMID: 25077026 PMCID: PMC4113299 DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Evol ISSN: 2045-7758 Impact factor: 2.912
Origin of species used in the experiment
| Plant species | Origin | Dutch population used in experiment | Present since |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eurasia | Dodewaard | 1950 | |
| Eurasia | Gendtse Polder | Native | |
| North America | Polder Zeevang | 1900 | |
| Eurasia | Polder Zeevang | Native | |
| South Africa | Millingerwaard | 1925 | |
| Eurasia | Heerlen | Native | |
| Eurasia | Millingerwaard/Meijendel | Native | |
| North America | Gendtse Polder | 1900 | |
| Eurasia | Seed company | Native | |
| Eurasia | Seed company | 1500 | |
| Eurasia | Seed company | Native | |
| Eurasia | Amersfoort | 1925 | |
| Eurasia | Ooijpolder | Native |
Underlined species names indicate exotic species. Some exotic plants originate in Eurasia and are non-native to the Netherlands, others originate from other continents.
Figure 1Diversity of metabolites in the 13 analyzed Asteraceae species. Frequency distribution of the mass signals (black bars) and reconstructed metabolites (gray bars).
Figure 2Number of metabolites in native versus invasive plants. Average total number of mass signals (A) and number of reconstructed metabolites (B), number of species-unique masses (C) and species-unique reconstructed metabolites (D) of exotic plants and native congeneric species. Induced plants (gray bars) received herbivory by Mamestra brassicae caterpillars. Control plants (black bars) were without herbivory. Plant origin differed significantly for total number of reconstructed metabolites, and unique number of mass signals and reconstructed metabolites (**P < 0.005, ***P < 0.0001, Table 2). Herbivory induced the total number of mass signals and reconstructed metabolites in both native and exotic plants (P < 0.05, Table 2). Error bars indicate standard errors of mean.
Effect of plant origin, species, and herbivory treatment on the number of LC-MS mass signals and reconstructed metabolites in plants
| Mass signals | Reconstructed metabolites | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| df | Total | Unique | Total | Unique | |
| Origin | 1 | 0.76 | 28.52 | 69.26 | 15.54 |
| Species within origin | 11 | 74.69 | 189.60 | 152.68 | 203.54 |
| Treatment | 1 | 10.34 | 6.77 | 9.54 | 2.11 |
| Origin × Treatment | 1 | 0.14 | 0.53 | 0.87 | 0.17 |
Table entries are F values of multifactorial ANOVA.
N = 227.
Rank transformed data.
P < 0.0001,
P < 0.005,
P < 0.05.
Figure 3Species-unique metabolites in native versus invasive plants per genus (Artemisia, Bidens, Senecio, Solidago, Tanacetum, Tragopogon). Average number (+SE) of unique metabolites per species in native and invasive plants in the control treatment without herbivory. Gray bars indicate exotic species, white bars indicate native species. Asterisks indicate significant differences between exotic and native species within the same genus (ANOVA, all P < 0.001).
Relative growth of Mamestra brassicae larvae on exotic and native plants. Relative growth was calculated as end weight/begin weight
| Genus | Species | Origin | Mean growth (±SE) | N |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exotic | 0.30 (±0.12) | 9 | ||
| Native | 2.96 (±0.67)* | 10 | ||
| Exotic | 2.70 (±0.85) | 5 | ||
| Native | 1.36 (±0.63) | 4 | ||
| Exotic | 1.33 (±0.23) | 10 | ||
| Native | 3.50 (±0.78)+ | 10 | ||
| Native | 4.30 (±0.67)* | 10 | ||
| Exotic | 0.72 (±0.31) | 10 | ||
| Native | 4.31 (±0.79)* | 10 | ||
| Exotic | 0.85 (±0.20) | 9 | ||
| Native | 1.63 (±0.47) | 9 | ||
| Exotic | 1.44 (±0.31) | 6 | ||
| Native | 0.35 (±0.10)* | 10 |
Asterisk, significant differences between exotic and native species within congeneric species pairs (ANOVA, significance level after Bonferroni correction for multiple tests *P < 0.008, +P = 0.05).