Literature DB >> 33552105

Flower Production, Headspace Volatiles, Pollen Nutrients, and Florivory in Tanacetum vulgare Chemotypes.

Elisabeth J Eilers1, Sandra Kleine1, Silvia Eckert1,2, Simon Waldherr1, Caroline Müller1.   

Abstract

Floral volatiles and reward traits are major drivers for the behavior of mutualistic as well as antagonistic flower visitors, i.e., pollinators and florivores. These floral traits differ tremendously between species, but intraspecific differences and their consequences on organism interactions remain largely unknown. Floral volatile compounds, such as terpenoids, function as cues to advertise rewards to pollinators, but should at the same time also repel florivores. The reward composition, e.g., protein and lipid contents in pollen, differs between individuals of distinct plant families. Whether the nutritional value of rewards within the same plant species is linked to their chemotypes, which differ in their pattern of specialized metabolites, has yet not been investigated. In the present study, we compared Tanacetum vulgare plants of five terpenoid chemotypes with regard to flower production, floral headspace volatiles, pollen macronutrient and terpenoid content, and floral attractiveness to florivorous beetles. Our analyses revealed remarkable differences between the chemotypes in the amount and diameter of flower heads, duration of bloom period, and pollen nutritional quality. The floral headspace composition of pollen-producing mature flowers, but not of premature flowers, was correlated to that of pollen and leaves in the same plant individual. For two chemotypes, florivorous beetles discriminated between the scent of mature and premature flower heads and preferred the latter. In semi-field experiments, the abundance of florivorous beetles and flower tissue miners differed between T. vulgare chemotypes. Moreover, the scent environment affected the choice and beetles were more abundant in homogenous plots composed of one single chemotype than in plots with different neighboring chemotypes. In conclusion, flower production, floral metabolic composition and pollen quality varied to a remarkable extend within the species T. vulgare, and the attractiveness of floral scent differed also intra-individually with floral ontogeny. We found evidence for a trade-off between pollen lipid content and pollen amount on a per-plant-level. Our study highlights that chemotypes which are more susceptible to florivory are less attacked when they grow in the neighborhood of other chemotypes and thus gain a benefit from high overall chemodiversity.
Copyright © 2021 Eilers, Kleine, Eckert, Waldherr and Müller.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Asteraceae; Phalacridae; chemodiversity; gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS); insect behavior; protein:lipid-ratio; terpenoids

Year:  2021        PMID: 33552105      PMCID: PMC7855176          DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2020.611877

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Plant Sci        ISSN: 1664-462X            Impact factor:   5.753


  46 in total

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4.  Pollinator or pedigree: which factors determine the evolution of pollen nutrients?

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5.  Lipids are required for directional pollen-tube growth.

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7.  Bees use honest floral signals as indicators of reward when visiting flowers.

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Journal:  Ecol Lett       Date:  2014-12-10       Impact factor: 9.492

8.  Specialized bees fail to develop on non-host pollen: do plants chemically protect their pollen?

Authors:  Christophe J Praz; Andreas Müller; Silvia Dorn
Journal:  Ecology       Date:  2008-03       Impact factor: 5.499

9.  Petunia flowers solve the defence/apparency dilemma of pollinator attraction by deploying complex floral blends.

Authors:  Danny Kessler; Celia Diezel; David G Clark; Thomas A Colquhoun; Ian T Baldwin
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10.  Pollen Protein: Lipid Macronutrient Ratios May Guide Broad Patterns of Bee Species Floral Preferences.

Authors:  Anthony D Vaudo; John F Tooker; Harland M Patch; David J Biddinger; Michael Coccia; Makaylee K Crone; Mark Fiely; Jacob S Francis; Heather M Hines; Mackenzie Hodges; Stephanie W Jackson; Denis Michez; Junpeng Mu; Laura Russo; Maliheh Safari; Erin D Treanore; Maryse Vanderplanck; Eric Yip; Anne S Leonard; Christina M Grozinger
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