Evolution of resistance and tolerance to herbivores: testing the trade-off hypothesis

PeerJ. 2015 Mar 3:3:e789. doi: 10.7717/peerj.789. eCollection 2015.

Abstract

Background. To cope with their natural enemies, plants rely on resistance and tolerance as defensive strategies. Evolution of these strategies among natural population can be constrained by the absence of genetic variation or because of the antagonistic genetic correlation (trade-off) between them. Also, since plant defenses are integrated by several traits, it has been suggested that trade-offs might occur between specific defense traits. Methodology/Principal Findings. We experimentally assessed (1) the presence of genetic variance in tolerance, total resistance, and leaf trichome density as specific defense trait, (2) the extent of natural selection acting on plant defenses, and (3) the relationship between total resistance and leaf trichome density with tolerance to herbivory in the annual herb Datura stramonium. Full-sib families of D. stramonium were either exposed to natural herbivores (control) or protected from them by a systemic insecticide. We detected genetic variance for leaf trichome density, and directional selection acting on this character. However, we did not detect a negative significant correlation between tolerance and total resistance, or between tolerance and leaf trichome density. We argue that low levels of leaf damage by herbivores precluded the detection of a negative genetic correlation between plant defense strategies. Conclusions/Significance. This study provides empirical evidence of the independent evolution of plant defense strategies, and a defensive role of leaf trichomes. The pattern of selection should favor individuals with high trichomes density. Also, because leaf trichome density reduces damage by herbivores and possess genetic variance in the studied population, its evolution is not constrained.

Keywords: Genetic variation; Herbivory; Leaf trichomes; Natural selection; Plant defense; Resistance; Tolerance; Trade-offs.

Grants and funding

This paper constitutes a partial fulfillment of the Graduate Program in Biological Sciences of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). EKB received scholarship and financial support by the National Council of Science and Technology (CONACyT). The study was funded by the CONACyT grant “Evolución Adaptativa en Datura: Resistencia y Tolerancia a los Herbívoros” to JNF. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.