AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how plants adapt to damage from herbivores, focusing on two species: the rare Medicago citrina and the more common M. arborea.
  • Researchers simulated herbivory by removing 80% of the plants' aerial biomass and assessed how each species coped with this damage.
  • Findings show that tolerance to herbivory varies between the species, with M. citrina exhibiting lower tolerance and greater stress response than M. arborea, highlighting the impact of evolutionary history and species exposure to herbivores on plant resilience.

Article Abstract

Mechanisms that allow plants to survive and reproduce after herbivory are considered to play a key role in plant evolution. In this study, we evaluated how tolerance varies in species with different historic exposure to herbivores considering ontogeny. We exposed the range-restricted species Medicago citrina and its closely related and widespread species M. arborea to one and two herbivory simulations (80 % aerial biomass loss). Physiological and growth parameters related to tolerance capacity were assessed to evaluate constitutive values (without herbivory) and induced tolerance after damage. Constitutive traits were not always related to greater tolerance, and each species compensated for herbivory through different traits. Herbivory damage only led to mortality in M. citrina; adults exhibited root biomass loss and increased oxidative stress after damage, but also compensated aerial biomass. Despite seedlings showed a lower death percentage than adults after herbivory in M. citrina, they showed less capacity to recover control values than adults. Moderate tolerance to M. arborea herbivory and low tolerance to M. citrina is found. Thus, although the constitutive characteristics are maintained in the lineage, the tolerance of plants decreases in M. citrina. That represents how plants respond to the lack of pressure from herbivores in their habitat.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2021.110890DOI Listing

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