Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations
Stolpe C, Krämer U, Müller C (2017)
Environmental and Experimental Botany 133: 78-86.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Stolpe, ClemensUniBi;
Krämer, Ute;
Müller, CarolineUniBi
Einrichtung
Abstract / Bemerkung
Abiotic and biotic factors can significantly influence and modify the chemical composition of a plant. In this study the influences of exposure to cadmium and zinc and of herbivory on plant-insect interactions were investigated. We studied the performance of two herbivore species with different feeding modes (chewing versus sucking) on the metal-hyperaccumulator species Arabidopsis halleri (Brassicaceae) as well as individual glucosinolate (GLS) and element concentrations of young and old leaves in response to different soil and herbivore treatments. The performance of both insect species was reduced on plants grown on metal-amended soil compared to plants grown on unamended soil. This result supports the elemental defense hypothesis, which postulates that high internal metal concentrations can protect plants from herbivores and which was mostly tested with chewing herbivores so far. Alongside higher levels of heavy metals in plants grown on metal-amended soil, GLS and element concentrations were differentially affected in young versus old leaves and responded differently to herbivory. Concentrations of most GLS and elements were higher in young compared to old leaves, which is in line with the optimal defense theory, which predicts a better defense in more valuable tissue. Our results highlight that various organic as well as inorganic compounds in plants can be affected in different directions by the complex interplay between plants, herbivores, and heavy metal contamination of soil.
Stichworte
Induced defense;
Myzus persicae;
Mamestra brassicae;
Elemental defense;
Optimal defense theory;
Joint effects
Erscheinungsjahr
2017
Zeitschriftentitel
Environmental and Experimental Botany
Band
133
Seite(n)
78-86
ISSN
0098-8472
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2906173
Zitieren
Stolpe C, Krämer U, Müller C. Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations. Environmental and Experimental Botany. 2017;133:78-86.
Stolpe, C., Krämer, U., & Müller, C. (2017). Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations. Environmental and Experimental Botany, 133, 78-86. doi:10.1016/j.envexpbot.2016.10.003
Stolpe, Clemens, Krämer, Ute, and Müller, Caroline. 2017. “Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations”. Environmental and Experimental Botany 133: 78-86.
Stolpe, C., Krämer, U., and Müller, C. (2017). Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations. Environmental and Experimental Botany 133, 78-86.
Stolpe, C., Krämer, U., & Müller, C., 2017. Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations. Environmental and Experimental Botany, 133, p 78-86.
C. Stolpe, U. Krämer, and C. Müller, “Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations”, Environmental and Experimental Botany, vol. 133, 2017, pp. 78-86.
Stolpe, C., Krämer, U., Müller, C.: Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations. Environmental and Experimental Botany. 133, 78-86 (2017).
Stolpe, Clemens, Krämer, Ute, and Müller, Caroline. “Heavy metal (hyper)accumulation in leaves of Arabidopsis halleri is accompanied by a reduced performance of herbivores and shifts in leaf glucosinolate and element concentrations”. Environmental and Experimental Botany 133 (2017): 78-86.
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