Interactions between arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and foliar‐feeding insects inPlantago lanceolataL.
Open Access
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in New Phytologist
- Vol. 128 (1) , 79-87
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8137.1994.tb03989.x
Abstract
A field experiment was conducted to investigate whether infection by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi has any effect on herbivory by foliar-feeding insects. Plants of PI ant ago laureolata L. were grown in a randomized block design and natural levels of mycorrhizal infection reduced by the application of the granular fungicide iprodione. Plant growth responses were examined and herbivore bioassays performed by rearing both a chewing and sucking insect on the leaves of mycorrhizal and fungicide-treated plants. Fungicide application successfully reduced mycorrhizal infection, and this led to reductions in foliar biomass, caused by lower leaf number. However, fungicide-treated plants suffered consistently higher levels of damage by centralist chewing and leaf-mining insects, which colonized the plants. The chewing insect bioassay confirmed the field results, in that larvae of Arttia caja L. (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae) consumed more leaf material from plants in which infection was reduced. There was no evidence that AM fungi altered food quality for the chewing insect. Instead, infection caused an increase in the carbon/nutrient balance, which in turn led to increased levels of the carbon-based feeding deterrents, aucubin and catalpol, The sucking insect, Mvzus perskae (Sulzer) reacted in an opposite fashion to the ehewtr. with performance being greater on mycorrhizal plants. Again, there was no evidence that an alteration in food Quality was the cause, and in this case infection may result in changes in leaf morphology which benefit the insect. We suggest that under conditions of high light and low nutrient availability. AM infection can alter the carbon/nutrient balance of plants, leading to an increased allocation to carbon-based defences. This can have important consequences for insect herbivore performance and the patterns of herbivory in field situations.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- 10.1007/BF00367163Published by Test accounts ,2011
- A modified procedure for staining roots to detect VA mycorrhizasPublished by Elsevier ,2009
- Improved nitrogen uptake and transport from 15N‐labelled nitrate by external hyphae of arbuscular mycorrhiza under water‐stressed conditionsNew Phytologist, 1994
- Effects of Pesticides on the Germination of Weed Seeds: Implications for Manipulative ExperimentsJournal of Applied Ecology, 1992
- Effects of nitrogen and foliar biomass on population parameters of cabbage insectsEntomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 1991
- A new method which gives an objective measure of colonization of roots by vesicular—arbuscular mycorrhizal fungiNew Phytologist, 1990
- Carbon flow into soil and external hyphae from roots of mycorrhizal cucumber plantsNew Phytologist, 1990
- The Ecology And Economics Of Storage In PlantsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1990
- Response of generalist and specialist insects to qualitative allelochemical variationJournal of Chemical Ecology, 1988
- Allocation of carbon to growth, storage and respiration in the vegetative barley plantPlant, Cell & Environment, 1980