首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Plant-derived visual signals may protect beetle herbivores from bird predators.
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Plant-derived visual signals may protect beetle herbivores from bird predators.

机译:植物来源的视觉信号可以保护甲虫食草动物免受鸟类掠食者的侵害。

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Insect herbivores often use chemical signals obtained from their food plants to deter enemies and/or attract sexual partners. Do plant-based visual signals act similarly, i.e., repel consumers' enemies and appeal to potential mates? We explored this question using the pollen-feeding beetle Pygopleurus israelitus (Glaphyridae), a specialized pollinator of Anemone coronaria's chemically defended red-morph flowers. We presented dead beetles, which had fed either on anemones or on cat food, to young domestic chicks on a red (anemone-like) or a green (leaf-like) background. We determined whether the beetles' background color and diet affected the chicks' feeding. Cuticle surface extracts from anemone-fed beetles, but not from cat food-fed beetles, contained a secondary metabolite characteristic of anemones. Latencies to the first picking up and consuming of beetles from green backgrounds were shorter than of beetles from red backgrounds. The picking up order of beetles also indicated that prey from the green background was preferred. The chicks retained this preference when re-tested, 3 days later. Handling times of anemone-fed beetles were longer than of cat food-fed beetles. A previous study showed that glaphyrids improve their mate-finding prospects by orienting to large red anemone flowers. Here, female beetles preferred cat food-fed to anemone-fed males in mate-choice assays, thus anemone-derived chemicals did not increase mating success. Instead, the combined results indicate that A. coronaria's red flowers provide a visual signal that may both deter its herbivore's predators and attract its mates. To our knowledge, this is the first experimental evidence for a potential protective role of plant-derived visual signals for insect herbivores/pollinators.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00265-013-1572-z
机译:食草动物经常利用从食用植物中获得的化学信号来阻止敌人和/或吸引性伴侣。基于植物的视觉信号是否起到类似的作用,即击退消费者的敌人并吸引潜在的同伴?我们使用以花粉为食的甲虫Pygopleurus israelitus(Glaphyridae)(海葵冠状病毒的化学防御红色变体花的专门授粉媒介)探讨了这个问题。我们将死了的甲虫喂给了海葵或猫食,以红色(类似氨酮的)或绿色(类似叶子的)背景的幼雏给了它们。我们确定了甲虫的背景颜色和饮食是否影响了雏鸡的喂养。从海葵喂养的甲虫而不是猫食喂养的甲虫的角质层表面提取物含有海葵的次生代谢产物。第一次采摘和食用绿色背景的甲虫的潜伏期短于红色背景的甲虫。甲虫的捡拾顺序还表明,绿色背景的猎物是首选。 3天后重新测试时,小鸡保留了这种偏好。银莲花喂养的甲虫的处理时间比猫食喂养的甲虫的处理时间长。先前的研究表明,剑兰通过定向大的红色海葵花来改善寻找伴侣的前景。在这里,雌性甲虫在伴侣选择试验中比起由海葵喂养的雄性更喜欢以猫食喂养,因此,由海葵衍生的化学物质不会增加交配的成功率。取而代之的是,合并的结果表明冠冠农杆菌的红色花朵提供了视觉信号,既可以阻止其食草动物的捕食者,又可以吸引其配偶。据我们所知,这是植物来源的视觉信号对昆虫食草动物/授粉媒介的潜在保护作用的第一个实验证据。数字对象标识符http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00265-013-1572-z

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