Plant neighbor identity influences plant biochemistry and physiology related to defense

Amanda K. Broz, Corey D. Broeckling, Clelia De-la-Peña, Matthew R. Lewis, Erick Greene, Ragan M. Callaway, Lloyd W. Sumner, Jorge M. Vivanco

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

119 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Chemical and biological processes dictate an individual organism's ability to recognize and respond to other organisms. A small but growing body of evidence suggests that plants may be capable of recognizing and responding to neighboring plants in a species specific fashion. Here we tested whether or not individuals of the invasive exotic weed, Centaurea maculosa, would modulate their defensive strategy in response to different plant neighbors.Results: In the greenhouse, C. maculosa individuals were paired with either conspecific (C. maculosa) or heterospecific (Festuca idahoensis) plant neighbors and elicited with the plant defense signaling molecule methyl jasmonate to mimic insect herbivory. We found that elicited C. maculosa plants grown with conspecific neighbors exhibited increased levels of total phenolics, whereas those grown with heterospecific neighbors allocated more resources towards growth. To further investigate these results in the field, we conducted a metabolomics analysis to explore chemical differences between individuals of C. maculosa growing in naturally occurring conspecific and heterospecific field stands. Similar to the greenhouse results, C. maculosa individuals accumulated higher levels of defense-related secondary metabolites and lower levels of primary metabolites when growing in conspecific versus heterospecific field stands. Leaf herbivory was similar in both stand types; however, a separate field study positively correlated specialist herbivore load with higher densities of C. maculosa conspecifics.Conclusions: Our results suggest that an individual C. maculosa plant can change its defensive strategy based on the identity of its plant neighbors. This is likely to have important consequences for individual and community success.

Original languageEnglish
Article number115
JournalBMC Plant Biology
Volume10
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 17 2010

Funding

We wish to thank Giles Thelen for assistance in field site selection and Aaron Barczewski for his assistance in conducting the greenhouse experiment. Funds for this work were provided by National Science Foundation to JMV (MCB-0542642 and IBN 0335203), and U.S. Department of Defense SERDP (SI 1388) to JMV and RMC.

FundersFunder number
RMC Research Corporation
SI 1388
IBN 0335203, MCB-0542642
0542642, 0335203

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