Polar extracts of the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus (L.) reduce assimilation efficiency but do not deter the herbivorous isopod Idotea baltica (Pallas)
نویسندگان
چکیده
Plant secondary metabolites provide resistance against herbivory if they are capable of decreasing herbivore performance or deterring feeding. Here we test the effects of phlorotannin-containing polar extracts from the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus on the assimilation efficiency and feeding preferences of the herbivorous isopod Idotea baltica. We test the effects separately for each sex of the isopod to test the hypothesis that the digestive efficiencies of the sexes may have diverged. Phlorotannincontaining polar extracts were incorporated into an agar-based artificial food in varying amounts. We also varied the quality of the food, using high-quality food containing animal proteins and low-quality food containing only algal material. The total assimilation efficiency as well as the assimilation efficiencies of carbon and nitrogen decreased with an increasing concentration of phlorotannin-containing extracts. The negative effects on carbon and nitrogen assimilation were higher when extracts were incorporated in the high-quality food. Females were consistently more efficient than males in all assimilation measures; there were no interactions between sex and food quality or phlorotannin concentration, suggesting that the digestive efficiency of the sexes had diverged but that the two sexes responded similarly to phlorotannin enriched artificial food. Although phlorotannincontaining extracts were harmful to performance, they did not deter feeding in preference tests. On the contrary: the isopods preferred the food containing more phlorotannins, suggesting that phlorotannins may act as cues in host recognition. Thus phlorotannins were inefficient deterrents, and I. baltica seems to be adapted to utilizing phlorotannin-containing foods despite their detrimental effects on assimilation. We suggest that F. vesiculosus provides a predation refuge and temporal constancy in availability for I. baltica, both of which select for the ability to utilize it as a food. Phlorotannin-containing polar extracts from F. vesiculosus are still harmful digestibility reducers, and may thereby prevent complete specialization and generate selection for utilization of a wider host range. D 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Inducible resistance to herbivory in Fucus vesiculosus—duration, spreading and variation with nutrient availability
Inducible resistance in plants is a defense strategy for avoiding the negative consequences of herbivory on plant fitness. Since resistance is costly, the induction of resistance may depend on resource availability. Resource-based plant–herbivore hypotheses predict that the cost of producing carbon-based defensive metabolites will be higher when an excess of nutrients is available for growth. W...
متن کاملNutrient Enhancement Increases Performance of a Marine Herbivore via Quality of Its Food Alga
Herbivore performance and reproductive output are expected to covary with qualitative changes in the host plant. The availability of nutrients may be especially important for the quality of algae as food through its effect on both primary and secondary metabolism and within-plant variation. We evaluated the effect of the nutrient enrichment of the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus on the fecundity, ...
متن کاملFeeding preferences and performance of a marine isopod on seaweed hosts: cost of habitat specialization
The evolutionary hypotheses on plant-herbivore interaction assume that plant secondary compounds, such as the phlorotannins of brown algae, function as feeding deterrents for herbivores. We studied the effect of seaweed quality on the feeding preferences and performance of the isopod Idotea baltica. We offered I. baltica 6 species of algae, abundant in the Fucus vesiculosus belts where this mes...
متن کاملInduced resistance to periwinkle grazing in the brown seaweed Fucus vesiculosus (Phaeophyceae): molecular insights and seaweed-mediated effects on herbivore interactions.
Herbivory is a key factor for controlling seaweed biomass and community structure. To cope with grazers, constitutive and inducible defenses have evolved in macroalgae. Inducible chemical defenses show grazer-specificity and, at the same time, have the potential to mediate interactions among different herbivores. Furthermore, temporal variations in defense patterns, which may adjust antiherbivo...
متن کاملComparing the Relative Importance of Water-Borne Cues and Direct Grazing for the Induction of Defenses in the Brown Seaweed Fucus vesiculosus
Some seaweed species have been shown to release water-borne cues after herbivore attack, for example, to attract natural enemies of the herbivore. These cues may also be sensed by neighboring seaweeds and used to adjust their defenses in anticipation of a possible herbivore attack. Several studies indicated information transfer between seaweed individuals in the past, including the brown seawee...
متن کامل