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Journal ArticleDOI

Interspecific competition among phloem-feeding insects mediated by induced host-plant sinks

Moshe Inbar, +2 more
- 01 Jul 1995 - 
- Vol. 76, Iss: 5, pp 1506-1515
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TLDR
This is the first demonstration of exploitation competition for plant assimilates between two insect—induced sinks, mediated by manipulation of plant phloem transport, stands in contrast to the absence of interference competition for galling sites between the two aphid species.
Abstract
The role of interspecific interactions among herbivorous insects is considered to be limited, especially in specialist communities. In the current study we report on exploitative interspecific interaction between two closely related phloem—feeding species of gall—forming aphids (Homoptera; Pemphigidae; Fordinae), mediated by the supply of photoassimilates from the host plant. Geoica sp. forms a spherical gall on the leaflet midrib of Pistacia palaestina (Anacardiaceae), while Forda formicaria forms crescent—shaped galls on the leaflet margin of the same host plant. Using 14C labeling, we were able to trace the food supply (assimilated carbohydrates) from the leaves to galls of each species. We found that Geoica galls are strong sinks. These galls divert the normal phloem transport of the plant and reduce the amount of assimilates imported by F. formicaria, especially when they are located on the same leaflet. By the end of the season Geoica caused death of 84% of F. formicaria galls that were located on the same leaflet, and reduced reproductive success in the surviving galls by 20%. This is because the presence of Geoica causes early senescence (but not abscission) of the leaflet it is on (whether or not F. formicaria is present). The interaction is asymmetrical: F. formicaria did not affect reproductive output of Geoica nor did it cause visible damage to the leaflets. To our knowledge, this it the first demonstration of exploitation competition for plant assimilates between two insect—induced sinks. This exploitative competition, mediated by manipulation of plant phloem transport, stands in contrast to the absence of interference competition for galling sites between the two aphid species. Although their spatial distributions partly overlapped, the niche breadth of each species (measured from gall positions on leaves along the shoot axis) was not affected by the presence of the other. Moreover, when both species were located on the same leaf, they formed galls independently on the same or different leaflets, and there was no indication of interference competition over galling sites.

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Citations
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Interspecific interactions in phytophagous insects revisited: a quantitative assessment of competition theory

TL;DR: A new paradigm that accounts for indirect interactions and facilitation is required to describe how interspecific competition contributes to the organization of phytophagous insect communities, and perhaps to other plant and animal communities as well.
Journal ArticleDOI

Indirect Interaction Webs: Herbivore-Induced Effects Through Trait Change in Plants

TL;DR: This review explores the herbivore-induced indirect effects mediated by such plant responses following herbivory in terrestrial systems and results in interaction linkages, which alter species richness and abundance in arthropod communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms and evolution of plant resistance to aphids.

TL;DR: This work identifies general patterns of resistance, with a special focus on recognition, phytohormonal signalling, secondary metabolites and induction of plant resistance, and discusses how host specialization can enable aphids to co-opt both thephytoh hormonal responses and defensive compounds of plants for their own benefit at a local scale.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silencing OsHI-LOX makes rice more susceptible to chewing herbivores, but enhances resistance to a phloem feeder

TL;DR: The observation that suppression of JA activity results in increased resistance to an insect indicates that revision of the generalized plant defense models in monocotyledons is required, and may help develop novel strategies to protect rice against insect pests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Herbivore‐induced plant vaccination. Part I. The orchestration of plant defenses in nature and their fitness consequences in the wild tobacco Nicotiana attenuata

TL;DR: An example of naturally occurring vaccination of the native tobacco plant against Manduca hornworms by prior attack from the mirid bug, Tupiocoris notatus (Dicyphus minimus), which results from the elicitation of two categories of induced plant responses.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Community Structure, Population Control, and Competition

TL;DR: Populations of producers, carnivores, and decomposers are limited by their respective resources in the classical density-dependent fashion and interspecific competition must necessarily exist among the members of each of these three trophic levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tansley Review No. 27 The control of carbon partitioning in plants

TL;DR: There is a need for a greater understanding of organ initiation and development, the clear identification of whether growth is sink or source limited, and a detailed assessment of the role of storage in buffering developmental and environmental changes in sink and source activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Induced Plant Responses to Herbivory

TL;DR: This review considers the characteristics of changes that relate to their role as defenses in induced responses against herbivores.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photosynthesis, carbon partitioning, and yield

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis of photosynthesis in Relation to Sink Demand and the role of source and sink systems in this evolution.
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