363 research outputs found
Central Metabolic Responses to Ozone and Herbivory Affect Photosynthesis and Stomatal Closure.
Plants have evolved adaptive mechanisms that allow them to tolerate a continuous range of abiotic and biotic stressors. Tropospheric ozone (O3), a global anthropogenic pollutant, directly affects living organisms and ecosystems, including plant-herbivore interactions. In this study, we investigate the stress responses of Brassica nigra (wild black mustard) exposed consecutively to O3 and the specialist herbivore Pieris brassicae Transcriptomics and metabolomics data were evaluated using multivariate, correlation, and network analyses for the O3 and herbivory responses. O3 stress symptoms resembled those of senescence and phosphate starvation, while a sequential shift from O3 to herbivory induced characteristic plant defense responses, including a decrease in central metabolism, induction of the jasmonic acid/ethylene pathways, and emission of volatiles. Omics network and pathway analyses predicted a link between glycerol and central energy metabolism that influences the osmotic stress response and stomatal closure. Further physiological measurements confirmed that while O3 stress inhibited photosynthesis and carbon assimilation, sequential herbivory counteracted the initial responses induced by O3, resulting in a phenotype similar to that observed after herbivory alone. This study clarifies the consequences of multiple stress interactions on a plant metabolic system and also illustrates how omics data can be integrated to generate new hypotheses in ecology and plant physiology
The dynamics of a tephritid seed predator on Tripolium vulgare in a stochastic and heterogeneous environment
In this thesis the factors regulating the interaction between the seed predatory fly Paroxyna plantaginis (Diptera: Tephritidae) and its host plant Tripolium vulgare, (former Aster tripolium, Asteraceae) are determined and evaluated. The host is patchily distributed on islands in the study area (the archipelago of Skeppsvik 63°44-48' N, 20°34-40'E) in northern Sweden. Possible factors that may cause the persistence of this system include direct density-dependent feedback processes, temporal and spatial heterogeneity, and the effect of stochasticity (chance). The impact of these forces is analysed through both pattern and process approaches, concentrating on the spatial and temporal distribution of the resource and the timing and dispersal of the fly, as well as the influence of stochasticity.
Relating attack frequencies to host density showed no strong indication of tight regulation between the specialist seed predator and its host plant (Paper I). Smaller plants and subpopulations were subject to the highest variation in attack frequency, suggesting that there is a strong element of chance influencing the risk of attack. There were, however, indications of a spatial effect at low fly densities, which seemed to break down at higher densities, implying that dispersal behaviour and strength may be related to adult fly density. The fragmented resource is more evenly used at higher attack frequencies (Paper II) : an effect which may be coupled directely to fly densities (Paper III). A mismatch between the phenology of the fly and the sea aster flowering phenology seems to benefit the first flowering flower heads, which are less often attacked in a normal year (Paper III) . However, it was experimentally shown that the flies compensate for the temporal and spatial unpredictability by a female-biased density-dependent dispersal (Paper IV). Density-independent water-borne dispersal during the puparia stage may also affect the dynamics of the tephritid (Paper V).
This system is an example of a highly persistent interaction, for which stochastic and spatial effects are of major importance. The density-dependent dispersal of females may act within generations in the spatially heterogeneous environment and this may be transformed from a local response to a mode of regulation that works between generations
DIFFERENCES AMONG APPRAISERS IN THE NEW YORK TYPE APPRAISAL PROGRAM
The purpose of the New York type appraisal program is to attempt to rate type traits objectively. Approximately 34 traits are included, of which 25 are rated by the appraiser and 9 by the herd manager. This paper reports differences among 18 appraisers, including S professional judges, 7 New York Artificial Breeders\u27 Cooperative fieldmen, and 3 other sire selection personnel all of whom rated 38 cows in a single herd. There were statistically significant differences (P ≤ .05) among appraisers for all traits. Average scores of the professionals were different from those of the fieldmen for all except six traits. Differences among the professionals were also large, as were the differences among the fieldmen. The results suggest that the fieldmen as a group appraised with as much consistency as the group of professional judges
DIFFERENCES AMONG APPRAISERS IN THE NEW YORK TYPE APPRAISAL PROGRAM
The purpose of the New York type appraisal program is to attempt to rate type traits objectively. Approximately 34 traits are included, of which 25 are rated by the appraiser and 9 by the herd manager. This paper reports differences among 18 appraisers, including S professional judges, 7 New York Artificial Breeders\u27 Cooperative fieldmen, and 3 other sire selection personnel all of whom rated 38 cows in a single herd. There were statistically significant differences (P ≤ .05) among appraisers for all traits. Average scores of the professionals were different from those of the fieldmen for all except six traits. Differences among the professionals were also large, as were the differences among the fieldmen. The results suggest that the fieldmen as a group appraised with as much consistency as the group of professional judges
Compensatory Phenolic Induction Dynamics in Aspen After Aphid Infestation
Condensed tannins (CTs) are polyphenolics and part of the total phenolic (TP) pool that shape resistance in aspen (Populus tremula). CTs are negatively associated with pathogens, but their resistance properties against herbivores are less understood. CTs shape resistance to pathogens and chewing herbivores and could also shape resistance to aphids. Being chemical pools that are highly variable it can further be questioned whether CT-shaped resistance is better described by constitutive levels, by the induced response potential, or by both. Here, aspen genotypes were propagated and selected to represent a range of inherent abilities to produce and store foliar CTs; the plantlets were then exposed to Chaitophorus aphid infestation and to mechanical (leaf rupture) damage, and the relative abundance of constitutive and induced CTs was related to aphid fitness parameters. As expected, aphid fecundity was negatively related to CT-concentrations of the aphid infested plants although more consistently related to TPs. While TPs increased in response to damage, CT induction was generally low and it even dropped below constitutive levels in more CT-rich genotypes, suggesting that constitutive CTs are more relevant measurements of resistance compared to induced CT-levels. Relating CT and TP dynamics with phenolic low molecular compounds further suggested that catechin (the building block of CTs) increased in response to aphid damage in amounts that correlated negatively with CT-induction and positively with constitutive CT-levels and aphid fecundity. Our study portrays dynamic phenolic responses to two kinds of damage detailed for major phenylpropanoid classes and suggests that the ability of a genotype to produce and store CTs may be a measurement of resistance, caused by other, more reactive, phenolic compounds such as catechin. Rupture damage however appeared to induce catechin levels oppositely supporting that CTs may respond differently to different kinds of damage
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