Transgenerational effects of ungulates and pre-dispersal seed predators on offspring success and resistance to herbivory
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Plos One
Fecha
2018-12-12Referencia bibliográfica
Aguirrebengoa M, Garcı´a-Planas M, Mu¨ller C, Gonza´lez-Megı´as A (2018) Transgenerational effects of ungulates and predispersal seed predators on offspring success and resistance to herbivory. PLoS ONE 13(12): e0207553. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207553
Patrocinador
Grant PR17-ECO-0021 from the Fundación BBVA; Grants CGL2011-24840 and CGL2015-71634-P from the Ministry of Economy and Competitivity of the Spanish Government (MICINN, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Gobierno de España); Fellowship (BES-2012-059576) linked to CGL2011-24840 grantResumen
Herbivorous mammals and insect pre-dispersal seed predators are two types of herbivores
that, despite their functional and morphological differences, tend to severely impact many
plant species, highly decreasing their seed production and even imperiling the performance
of their offspring through transgenerational effects. However, how they influence offspring
resistance to herbivory remains largely unknown. In this study we experimentally examined
the effects of ungulates and pre-dispersal seed predators on seed quality as well as on the
emergence, survival and resistance to herbivory of the seedlings of a semiarid herb. We
found that ungulates reduced seedling recruitment but increased seedling resistance to leaf
miners. These effects were probably a consequence of insufficient carbon provisioning in
seeds that reduced seed viability and provoked carbon limitation in seedlings. Pre-dispersal
seed predators did not influence seedling recruitment, but seedlings from mothers damaged
by ungulates and by pre-dispersal seed predators suffered less herbivory by grasshoppers.
Remarkably, intra-individual differences in damage by pre-dispersal seed predators affected
the rate of damage underwent by seedlings. That is, seedlings derived from fruits attacked
by seed predators were more resistant to herbivores than siblings derived from un-attacked
fruits in plant populations exposed to ungulates. To our knowledge, this is the first study
reporting variation in transgenerational-induced resistance of seedlings from the same
maternal plant. This study is a valuable contribution to the understanding of transgenerational
effects of multiple herbivores and their implications for a deeper comprehension of the
natural systems in which they co-occur.





