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Do canal‐cutting behaviours facilitate host‐range expansion by insect herbivores?

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TLDR
This paper examines if leaf-feeding insects capable of deactivating defensive plant canals with canal cutting often have broad host ranges, and identifies 94 species of canal-cutting insects, including eight new canal cutters described in this paper.
Abstract
According to the escalation–radiation model of co-evolution, insect herbivores that acquire the ability to circumvent a plant defence enter a new adaptive zone and increase in species. How herbivore counter-adaptations to plant defences might lead to speciation is poorly understood. Studies of nymphalid butterflies suggest that the evolution of a broadened host range may be a critical step. This paper examines if leaf-feeding insects capable of deactivating defensive plant canals with canal cutting often have broad host ranges. A total of 94 species of canal-cutting insects were identified from the literature, including eight new canal cutters described in this paper. Only 27% of canal cutters with known host ranges are generalists that feed on plants in multiple families. The proportion of generalist canal cutters is similar or lower than estimates of generalists among phytophagous insects overall. Only five species, at most, of the canal-cutting generalists feed exclusively on plants with secretory canals. The paucity of generalists can be attributed in part to the considerable taxonomic distance separating canal-bearing plant families and to their corresponding chemical distinctiveness. The dependence of many canal-cutting species on host chemicals for defence would also favour specialization. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 96, 715–731.

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Plant latex and other exudates as plant defense systems: Roles of various defense chemicals and proteins contained therein

Kotaro Konno
- 01 Sep 2011 - 
TL;DR: The existence of various adaptations in specialist herbivores itself is evidence that latex and its ingredients function as defenses at least against generalists, and the unique characteristics of latex-borne defense systems as transport systems of defense substances are discussed.
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Feeding by lepidopteran larvae is dangerous: A review of caterpillars’ chemical, physiological, morphological, and behavioral defenses against natural enemies

TL;DR: This review focuses on some of the best documented chemical, physiological, morphological, and behavioral characters which protect caterpillars from predators, parasitoids, and pathogens.
Journal ArticleDOI

To speciate, or not to speciate? Resource heterogeneity, the subjectivity of similarity, and the macroevolutionary consequences of niche-width shifts in plant-feeding insects.

TL;DR: It is suggested that resource similarity and, thus, the definition of ‘intermediate’, are subjective concepts that depend on the herbivore lineage's tolerance to dietary variation and can either decrease or increase speciation probabilities depending on the distribution of plants in resource space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Survey of a Salivary Effector in Caterpillars: Glucose Oxidase Variation and Correlation with Host Range

TL;DR: The relationship between host breadth and GOX activities is analyzed, and a significant relationship is found, where highly polyphagous species were more likely to possess relatively high levels of GOX compared to species with more limited host range.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real‐time, in vivo intracellular recordings of caterpillar‐induced depolarization waves in sieve elements using aphid electrodes

TL;DR: Living aphids and the direct current (DC) version of the electrical penetration graph (EPG) are used to detect changes in the membrane potential of Arabidopsis sieve elements (SEs) during caterpillar wounding to allow real-time monitoring of early electrophysiological responses in plant cells to damage.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG II

TL;DR: A revised and updated classification for the families of the flowering plants is provided in this paper, which includes Austrobaileyales, Canellales, Gunnerales, Crossosomatales and Celastrales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Butterflies and plants: a study in coevolution

TL;DR: The relationship between butterflies and their food plants is investigated, the examination of patterns of interaction between two major groups of organisms with a close and evident ecological relationship, such as plants and herbivores.
Book

The ecology of adaptive radiation

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the origins of ecological diversity and the ecological basis of speciation, as well as the progress of adaptive radiation and its role in ecology.
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